Sierra Foothills AVA
Sierra Foothills is a vast American Viticultural Area encompassing portions of seven of the twelve California counties in the foothill "belt" of the Sierra Nevadas in north-central California, an interior range that extends about in a northwest–southeast orientation from Mt. Lassen to Walker Pass near Bakersfield. The viticultural area is approximately long and lies to the east of Sacramento. It was established on November 18, 1987, as the nation's 96th and the state's 52nd appellation by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Treasury after evaluating the petition filed by the Sierra Foothills Winery Association of Somerset, California proposing a viticultural area in portions of Yuba, Nevada, Placer, El Dorado, Amador, Calaveras, Tuolumne and Mariposa Counties named "Sierra Foothills." Wine grapes were introduced to the area in the nineteenth century during the California Gold Rush of 1849. Over 280 vineyards/wineries are located within its boundaries.
History
The California Gold Rush spawned viticulture in the western foothills of the Sierra Nevadas. Some of the prospectors possessed knowledge about grape tending and winemakingand turned to a more settled way of life, planting orchards and vineyards, as placer mining diminished. In 1855, the State legislature passed a law which exempted from taxation all
newly planted grape vines for four years. The number of grape vines in El Dorado County jumped from 24,000 in 1856 to 77,500 1858; in Tuolumne County from 9,000 to 50,000 between 1857 and
1858. The first foothills winery was established in 1856 near Plymouth in Shenandoah Valley. This winery is the fourth oldest in the State of California. In 1861, the Son Francisco Bulletin featured a front-page story titled "Vineyards in the Foothills."
The foothill counties ranked among California's major wine producers during the 1870s and 1880s. In The Wines of America, Leon Adams states that "by 1890, more than 100 wineries were operating at such locations as Nevada City, Colfax, Lincoln, Penryn, Auburn, Placerville, Coloma, California, Shingle Springs, California, Ione, Volcano, Jackson, San Andreas, Sonora, Columbia, and Jamestown."
In the 1890s, viticulture had become established as a major industry. El Dorado County alone had approximately of the in vineyards at the peak of grape
growing in the foothills counties. However, the decline of gold mining at the turn of the century, followed by a loss in population, phylloxera vine disease, and Prohibition, contributed-to the eventual abandonment of all but a few vineyards. By 1930, vineyards were replaced by orchards of peaches and prunes. After the Repeal in 1933, wine grape growing re-surged in the valley lowlands. The viticulture in Yuba County has been associated with the Sacramento Valley because from the mid-1930's to the early 1980s wine grapes were not being cultivated in the foothills of Yuba County.
Terroir
"Sierra Foothills" viticultural area encompasses Sierra Nevada's north-central foothill "belt", an interior range that extends about in a northwest to southeast orientation from Mt. Lassen to Walker Pass near Bakersfield. The area is approximately long from Yuba County to Mariposa County and lies to the east of Sacramento with elevations ranging from above sea level, e.g., Jackson Valley and Auburn Ravine, to in Mariposa County. In comparison with the North Yuba viticultural area which ranges in elevation from, the Sierra Foothills viticultural area fully encompasses the range in elevation for the North Yuba viticultural area. The area encompasses and is one of the state's largest viticultural areas.The characteristics which distinguish the Sierra Foothills viticultural area from surrounding areas are summarized as follows:
- Name ;
- History ;
- Geology, topography, elevation and soils ; and,
- Climate, rainfall and temperature.
Vineyards
There are over 200 wineries located within the Sierra Foothills. Many are small, boutique wineries, often family-owned. The first known planting in the Sierra Foothills was in the Coarsegold Gulch area during the Gold Rush period.