Squaw Valley-Miramonte AVA
Squaw Valley-Miramonte is an American Viticultural Area and a unique grape-growing region in Fresno County, California surrounding the towns of [Squaw Valley, Fresno, California|Fresno County, California|Yokuts Valley] and Miramonte approximately east of the city of Fresno.
It was established as the nation's 230th, the state's 136th and the county's second appellation on August 7, 2015 by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, Treasury after reviewing the petition submitted by Christine Flannigan, owner of the Sierra Peaks Winery and Purgatory Vineyards, on behalf of the Squaw Valley Grape Growers Group, proposing the viticulural area named "Squaw Valley-Miramonte."
It is largely a rural region located entirely within the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains and does not overlap any established AVAs. To the northwest, west, and south is the San Joaquin Valley while the Sequoia National Forest is adjacent to its northern and eastern boundaries. The scenic highway U.S. 180 bisects the region eastward from the Valley to the Big Trees in Kings Canyon and Sequoia National Parks. The AVA stretches over with five commercially-producing vineyards cultivating about and three bonded wineries. The USDA plant hardiness zone range is 8b to 9b.
Terroir
Topography
The distinguishing features of Squaw Valley-Miramonte are its climate, topography, and soils. The topography consists of steep and rugged hillsides covered with boulders and oak woodlands. Elevations range from, and slope angles in the vineyards range from 15 to 40 percent. As a result of the steep terrain, mechanized vineyard equipment is not practical, so almost all vineyard work is done manually. The vineyards are also much smaller than those in the neighboring San Joaquin Valley, where the terrain is lower and flatter.Climate
Generally, the AVA's weather is above the fog and below the snow. With an average of 267 sunny days per year, Squaw Valley-Miramonte is part of the California interior chaparral and woodlands ecoregion, which exists on hills and mountains surrounding the San Joaquin Valley. Its winters are cool and wet while the summers are hot and dry. Daytime temperatures are cooler than in the neighboring Valley to the south, west, and northwest. However, nighttime temperatures are usually warmer because cool air drains off the slopes at night and settles in the Valley. The cool daytime temperatures and warm nighttime temperatures during the growing season produce higher levels of sugar and anthocyanins at harvest than occur in grapes grown in the warmer Valley.Rainfall is a year, typically more than that of the San Joaquin Valley and less than at elevations above. The high rainfall amounts increase the risk of erosion, so vineyard owners plant ground cover between the vineyard rows to help hold the soil in place. Most of the precipitation in the AVA falls as rain; however, at higher elevations it sometimes falls in the form of some snow. Micro-climates, including cold air sinks and temperature inversions occur. The day/night temperature shift in Squaw Valley–Miramonte is less pronounced than in the valley, making the region's growing season from one to three weeks later. Vineyards are located on south and southwest-facing slopes, providing the heat, needed for vine growth. Winds flow downhill out of the mountains at night cooling the vines.