David Hirsch is the owner of Hirsch Vineyards, located in the Sonoma Coast of California.
David opens up about his travels across the United States and across the world in the 1960s and 1970s, and about what led him eventually to the outer reaches of the Sonoma Coast to plant a vineyard. He also reveals what he has learned about the farming of grapevines over the years. And he talks about some of the key people who shaped his thoughts as he became the owner of a vineyard, and then subsequently a winery. Famous names from both Burgundy and California winemaking make an appearance within this conversation, and David is both frank and funny in his reminiscences about his life.
498: A Rush of Blood to the Wine Glass from Dan Keeling
497: Robert Drouhin Is From A Good Vintage
496: Sandy Block's Shot at Redemption
495: Steve Doerner and the Burgundian Bicyclists
494: Alicia Towns Franken's Wine Life
493: Neil Empson Shifted Gears Into Wine
492: Jean-Emmanuel Simond Does Not Like Your White Wine
491: Ukraine, Wine and Terror
490: Patrick Campbell Pruned Mountain Vines on Crutches
489: Sylvain Pataille and the New Old Style
488: Erin and the Volcano
487: Dominik Sona and a Conception of Kabinett
486: George Skouras and the New Old World
485: Robert Vifian and Stories from the Tan Dinh Wine Cellar
484: Erin Scala Looks Deep Into Lake Garda
483: Listen to Françoise Vannier and Never Look At Burgundy the Same Way Again
482: Lorenzo Accomasso and Barolo from the War Until Now
481: Wine Before and After the Genocide
480: Kevin Zraly Was At the Top of the World and Then Lost Almost Everything
479: Christopher Howell Doesn't Want It To Be About Him
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