Spanish Wine, Portuguese Wine and much, much more...

Wine Blogger Dinner! and Wine Blogger Conference!

EWBC 2008

On Tuesday, the 11th of March, there is a blogger dinner scheduled in downtown Barcelona. Bodegas Tintoralba, a large cooperative located in Almansa Spain, is sponsoring a dinner for bloggers of any make and model. Regardless if your passion is food, wine or travel, you are more than welcome to RSVP either here or here to inform us if you’ll be around. For those of you not familiar with the tasting schedule in Spain, the blogger dinner will be on the same week as the gigantic wine and food fair: Alimentaria. If you’re a blogger, we encourage you to sign up as press and attend, even if it’s only for one day. It’s a great opportunity to taste and explore wines from all over Spain, while making connections with other bloggers! For more information, check out Tintoralba’s website and Catavino.es.

In other news, the 2008 European Wine Blogger Conference has a home: www.ewbc2008.wineblogger.info, complete with a forum and contact page! Although the page is rather desolate still, we’re slowly adding to it as we go. Also, this past week at FITUR, I met with some people who are interested in helping us out, and possibly, sponsoring part of it. If you want to lend a hand, or hope to attend, please join us in the forum and share your ideas.

If you know someone who would like to help sponsor the event, or contribute in some other way, I’m all ears. Leave a message here, or over on the new site. So far, I think we have a great turn out shaping up. I do still hope and pray that we can attract some Americans on this side of the pond. What’s it going to take guys? How …

Posted in: EWBC 2008Wine News · Tags:


Catavino is Attending the II International Conference on Climate Change and Wine

conference1.jpg

Not a week ago, I was seriously considering prostituting my wines to get entry into the II International Conference on Climate Change and Wine hosted in Barcelona. For years, Al Gore (the keynote speaker for the event) has been one of my role models, a man willing to stand up for truth, acceptance and change on both the micro and macro level. His film, An Inconvenient Truth, shocked and frightened me into seeing how dramatically the world is changing, yet comforting me to know that change is possible if we’re willing to see the reality for what it is. Clearly, with a conference boasting of an impressive list of speakers fighting for conservation in winemaking including, Pancho Campo (a pioneer in conservation and winemaking, as well as the host) and Dr. David Smart (renowned scientist at UC Davis), just to name a few, I was eager to attend.

Years ago, a close friend of mine shared a personal mantra of his that reminded me of Al Gore’s message: we are all comfortable being uncomfortable. I love this expression because it sums up exactly what humans tend to do when life gets rocky; they fall into complacence. Rather than ripping away the blinders and accepting that we are all responsible for this planet, many choose to keep them on, blaming and giving excuses for why temperatures are rising, glaciers are melting and storms are increasing in intensity. Coincidence? I think not!

Climate Change in Spain

A few years back, Decanter wrote an interesting article on the consequences of climate change on Spanish vintners like Bodegas Torres, reporting that:

Increasingly hostile conditions associated with climate change are forcing vintners to head north.

The most dire predictions call for up to half …

Posted in: Wine News · Tags:


Page 6 of 6« First...«23456