San Bernabe AVA
San Bernabe is an American Viticultural Area (AVA) located in southern Monterey County, California. It lies within the larger, enlongated Monterey AVA in the Salinas Valley sandwiched between the Salinas River to the east, and the Santa Lucia Mountains to the west. The appellation's northern border is Pine Canyon and is adjacent on its southern border to the San Lucas viticultural area. The appellation was established on August 30, 2004, by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, Treasury after reviewing two petitions submitted by Claude Hoover from Delicato Family Vineyards proposing the establishment of a new viticultural area to be named "San Bernabe", and the realignment of the adjacent, established San Lucas viticultural area.
San Bernabe viticultural area encompasses of
predominantly rolling hills with sandy soils with currently of cultivation on its sole vineyard. The realignment of the San Lucas viticultural area transferred of rolling, sandy land from its northwestern area to the southern San Bernabe area. The adjustment avoided splitting a large vineyard, preventing overlapping boundaries and simply creating a common boundary line between two AVAs.
History
San Bernabe is a well recognized name that has its origins in the early days of Spanish settlement in the colony of Monterey. Father Pedro Font, a member of the California expedition of Spanish explorer Juan Bautista de Anza, documented the initial reference to San Bernabe on March 8, 1776. He wrote in his diary, "we had passed a spur of the Sierra de Santa Lucia.... The road at first runs through a spur of mountains, until it descends to a wide valley called the Cañada de San Bernabé. The San Bernabé area land of two leagues was granted to Petronillo Rios, a former Mexican artillery Sergeant, in 1842. His wife, Catarina and their family began raising cattle and crops on this land and producing wine from their grapes. The Rios ranch, known as Rancho San Bernabé, eventually became a successful vineyard and wine producing property. Other Spanish land grant ranchos were created in the 1840s, but none in the area shared the recognition of Rancho San Bernabé as a significant vineyard property. In the 1970s, Prudential-Southdown purchased the San Bernabe acreage for vineyard development and, in 1988, the Indelicato family bought the lone San Bernabe vineyard for its premium and super-premium wine market potential.Boundary
The Thompson Canyon and San Lucas U.S.G.S. quadrangle maps prominently identify the area as San Bernabe. The relevant Thomas Guide labels this area Rancho San Bernabe. The TopoZone map Web site identifies this rural area as San Bernabe. The San Bernabe vineyard estate occupies 52 percent of the viticultural area of the same name. The San Bernabe area boundary line connects benchmarks, mountain peaks, and other USGS map geographical features by using straight lines and several roads that follow the hilly terrain and soil changes. The San Bernabe viticultural area shares portions of its west and southwest boundary lines with the surrounding Monterey AVA, which is, in turn, surrounded by the expansive, multi-county Central Coast appellation. San Bernabe AVA shares its south boundary line with the realigned San Lucas AVA northwestern boundary. The transfer of from San Lucas to the San Bernabe viticultural area better defines the geographical differences between the established San Lucas and the new San Bernabe avoiding to split an existing vineyard between two AVAs.Terroir
Topography
The San Bernabe viticultural area is located immediately south of King City in the long Salinas Valley. The approximately viticultural area occupies the valley floor and rolling foothills, extending west from the Salinas River to the Santa Lucia Mountains. Unique viticultural qualities of the San Bernabe area include its climate, water quality, wind-produced eolian soils, and rolling hills. The realigned from the San Lucas viticultural area possess similar eolian soils, rolling hills topography, and irrigation water quality as found in the new San Bernabe viticultural area.Climate
The Salinas Valley forms a broad funnel for the strong, cool, afternoon marine winds coming off Monterey Bay during the warm months. The winds are drawn inland and south through the Salinas Valley by rising warm air that moderates the valley's high and low temperatures to varying degrees, producing a graduated effect in the valley. As a result, the San Bernabe area is warmer than viticultural areas to the north, and closer to Monterey Bay, and cooler than the adjoining San Lucas viticultural area to the immediate south. The winds dissipate gradually as they travel inland from Monterey Bay and create a series of temperature-unique, grape-growing areas within the long Salinas Valley. San Bernabe, at south of the Monterey Bay, averages a 30-degree daily temperature variation, while Salinas, at from the Monterey Bay, averages a smaller 18-degree daily temperature variation.The cool night air helps retain the grapes' acid and color, while the daily heat encourages ripeness and flavor. The San Bernabe area averages 30 frost- days annually, while Salinas, closer to Monterey Bay, averages only four frost-days. More rain falls at the Salinas Valley's extreme north and south ends, with less falling in the region between, which includes the San Bernabe viticultural area. At the valley's north end, the city of Salinas averages of annual rainfall, and, at the valley's south end, Paso Robles averages. The San Bernabe area, between the two ends, averages only of annual rainfall. Irrigation water is used extensively in the AVA's vineyards. The water comes from area reservoirs and contains only small amounts of carbonates and nitrates, which benefits the grapevines and soil. Toward the Monterey Bay, water quality declines as nitrate and carbonate levels increase.