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The Year in a Virginia Vineyard – Part 3: Harvest Season
Olivia Kennedy
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The Year in a Virginia Vineyard – Part 3: Harvest Season

Virginia Vineyard Harvest Season Highlights

Welcome back to The Year in a Virginia Vineyard. In Part 2: Summer in the Vineyard, we tamed wild canopies, fought humidity, and celebrated veraison. Now the season of anticipation gives way to the crescendo: harvest.

For winegrowers, harvest is both exhilarating and nerve-wracking — a three-to-six-week sprint where every decision counts. It’s when a year of labor crystallizes into clusters of fruit, and the choices made in these frantic weeks will echo in the bottle for years to come.

Timing Is Everything

Harvest is, above all, a game of timing. Grapes must be picked when sugars, acids, and tannins align in harmony. Too early, and the wines taste green and angular. Too late, and rains can dilute flavor, or fruit can overripen, losing vibrancy.

In Virginia, harvest season usually begins in late August with early-ripening whites such as Chardonnay, Seyval Blanc, and Pinot Gris. By September, Viognier and Petit Manseng are ready, followed by reds like Merlot and Cabernet Franc. Petit Verdot and Tannat are often the last to come off the vine in early October.

Growers walk their rows daily, sampling berries, tasting skins, and measuring Brix (sugar levels), pH, and titratable acidity. These numbers guide decisions, but experience and instinct often have the final say.

The Weather Factor

If summer in Virginia is humid, fall is unpredictable. September often coincides with the Atlantic hurricane season. A well-timed storm can dump inches of rain on ripening fruit, swelling berries and washing away concentration.

This forces vineyard managers into tough calls. Do they pick early, sacrificing a bit of ripeness for security? Or do they gamble, leaving clusters to bask in the sun and hoping the storm veers off course? Every harvest carries its share of sleepless nights, staring at weather apps and radar maps.

The Work of Harvest

Once the decision is made, it’s all hands on deck. Harvest crews begin before dawn, headlamps bobbing as clusters are carefully clipped into bins while the air is still cool. Early picking preserves acidity and prevents the fruit from overheating, which can cause unwanted fermentation before it even reaches the winery.

Hand-harvesting is still the gold standard for quality in Virginia. It allows pickers to select only clean, ripe clusters, leaving behind underripe or damaged fruit. Some larger vineyards use mechanical harvesters, but even then, sorting tables at the winery catch imperfections.

Bins are loaded onto trucks and rushed to the crush pad, where winemakers take over. Whites are often pressed immediately, their juice protected from oxidation. Reds may be destemmed and left to ferment on their skins, developing the color and tannin structure that will define them.

Variety by Variety

Each grape variety brings its own drama:

  • Viognier must be picked with precision, as its floral aromatics vanish if harvested too late.
     
  • Petit Manseng holds up beautifully in Virginia’s wet climate, its thick skins resisting dilution, allowing for rich, tropical whites.
     
  • Cabernet Franc, Virginia’s signature red, is typically picked earlier than Bordeaux cousins, balancing ripe fruit with bright acidity.
     
  • Petit Verdot can be a late-season nail-biter, requiring long hang time for tannins to ripen, but rewarding with deep, inky wines.
     

The Spirit of Harvest

Beyond the technicalities, harvest has a spirit all its own. It’s exhausting work — sticky, backbreaking, often frantic — but it’s also a season of joy. Workers share meals among the vines, toasts are made after long days, and the buzz of the winery mixes with laughter.

There’s a tangible sense of celebration. For many, harvest is why they fell in love with wine in the first place — the chance to be part of something alive, fleeting, and communal.

Looking Ahead

As the last bins are pressed and fermentations begin to bubble, the vineyard itself quiets. The leaves start to turn, signaling a shift to recovery. But growers aren’t done yet.

In Part 4: Fall After Harvest, we’ll explore what happens once the fruit is gone — how vines prepare for dormancy, soils are nourished, and vineyards ready themselves for winter. The frenzy of harvest may be over, but the cycle of care continues.

 

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Olivia Kennedy

Olivia KennedyOlivia Kennedy

A bottle of wine, a loaf of bread, and a block of delicious cheese are a few of my favorite things. Follow me as I explore wine country, searching for the best of these.

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A bottle of wine, a loaf of bread, and a block of delicious cheese are a few of my favorite things. Follow me as I explore wine country in search of the best of these.

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