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A Great Reserve, therefore, to be bottled separately
only in great vintages. I was aware of the fact that the process would
be much longer - and more difficult and costly in terms of resources and
energy - than a simple assemblage.
However, I was - and still am - thoroughly convinced that by tackling
the problem at its roots with judgement and painstaking patience and application,
I would be able over time to obtain the desired results. In order to achieve
this I had to take action at the source, at the real and only origin of
every great wine - i.e. the vineyard - by introducing all the changes
that could bring about the improvements in the vineyard, vine and grapes
that would allow them to express themselves more completely.
So I had to:
- select clones
with particularly good ampelographical properties, and able to produce
grapes of superior quality;
-
eradicate the parts of the vineyard offering results that were less
satisfactory in terms of quality, and were less in keeping with my
project;
- carry out improvements
in the soil, by means of drainage, and the movement of large masses
of earth from the bottom towards the top in order to return it to
its original conformation and bring to the surface all its natural
constituent micro and macro-elements that were not being exploited;
- replant the clones
that had been selected previously.
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Area
"1N" prior to the movement
of earth towards the top
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Area
"1N" halfway through the work
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My father Giuseppe
- "Gepin" to his friends - had already clearly identified an area within
the MONPRIVATO vineyard (a "tourna" in the local dialect of the Langa),
where a particular clone of Michét planted by his father Maurizio in the
early 1920's provided higher quality results. At the end of the '50s "Gepin"
selected these Michét vines, multiplied them, and - in 1963 - planted
them on the sites marked by the numbers "2" and "3".
It was this very "Michét clone" which, when my turn came in this special
"relayed" vineyard experience handed down from father to son, I vinified
separately in 1970 to produce the first vintage of Barolo MONPRIVATO.
A Barolo, this MONPRIVATO 1970, that when it is tasted thirty years later
shows itself to still be incredibly young, and brimming with all its components:
bouquet, body, depth and length, astonishing anyone who has the opportunity
to try it. It is very convincing and intense, including its color.
So it seemed clear to me that this clone should be used to make a great
MONPRIVATO "riserva".
And the only way of continuing to provide the "normal" Barolo MONPRIVATO
with the positive contribution of this clone was to select it with patience
and care, graft it, multiply it, and plant it in another "tourna" (or
part of the vineyard). The leading technicians had taught me that every
new selection brings further benefits, and they were proved right.
Thus, in 1983 I began to select the best vines of this old clone of the
Michét subvariety of Nebbiolo that had been replanted by "Gepin" and given
the benefit of acclimatising to the MONPRIVATO vineyard's particular soil
and microclimate over a period of more than half a century.
In March 1987, at the end of the fourth year of selection of the 3860
vines I had started out with, I was able to pick the buds of the 283 plants
that had provided the best results in terms of constant quality over each
of the four years of assessment and in all the vegetative phases: shooting,
flowering, setting, veraison and ripening. I grafted these onto not very
vigorous or productive rootstock which was almost in disuse, and planted
them in a nursery which had been specially prepared for their reproduction.
At the same time I identified two areas of the MONPRIVATO vineyard where
I would proceed with the uprooting of the old vines and the replanting
of the new ones, marking them on the map as "1N" and "2N". At the end
of the 1985 grape-harvest I eradicated the vines on site "1N" (area 1.02.12
Ha.).
In 1986 major work was carried out on the land from which the vines had
been removed:
- the earth was
broken up, and large masses were brought from the base to the surface
in order to return the soil to its original conformation, and from
a depth of four meters to extract unexploited, virgin soil which still
had a very high content of the natural macro and micro-elements -
limestone, boron, iron, magnesium, manganese, potassium, etc. - that
are essential to the vine for high quality production;
- drains were
constructed to convey any underground water and protect the soil from
erosion.
During this earth-moving
and draining work, blocks of arenaceous tufa with algae and shell-fossils
imprinted into them were found at a depth of four metres, testifying to
the marine origins of these hills.
When
this work had been completed, the ground was left to lie fallow for three
years without any form of cultivation. The mechanical and manual work
required to preserve it from any weeds was performed annually, and the
virgin soil was aired to help it mature.

Vines planted in 1988
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Finally, in the spring of 1988 I planted the new Nebbiolo vines - Michét
subvariety - that had been selected and multiplied at a relatively high
density - 5680 per hectare - for a hillside vineyard.
Looking back now, the entire operation could be considered to be a genuine
experiment designed to improve a clone genetically; more the concern of
a research institute or a public body than of a private vine-grower.
The philosophy which has been followed in the management of this new vineyard
is based on the application of the rules usually kept to over the remainder
of the MONPRIVATO vineyard and every other vineyard on the estate: to
achieve "raw grape material" of perfect quality from every point of view:
ideal ripening conditions
for the grapes;
perfectly sound fruit;
great concentration of the grape's constituent elements.
I understood that in order to obtain even more significant results I would
have to take to their limit the rules and restrictions already adopted
by my family in the past in the tending of the MONPRIVATO vineyard, so
I applied them during the practical application of the project as well
by performing:
- even shorter
winter pruning, with 5-7 buds (instead of 6-9) depending on the vigor
of each single plant;
- elimination
during the spring of imperfect bunches;
- thinning out
in the summer of any grapes in excess in relation to each plant's
ability to ripen each bunch to perfection;
- a yield of no
more than 5000 kg per hectare;
- hand-picking
of the grapes, with very strict grading and cleaning in the vineyard,
eliminating any imperfect grapes berry-by-berry.
In
the specific case of the "Cà d'MORISSIO" selection, in the first
ten vintages to date the actual production of grapes has fallen
each year within the maximum limit of 4400 kg/Ha., which correspond
to 30.8 Hl./Ha. on racking, and 775 grams per vine.

Pruning
of site "1N"
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During this stage of the "Cà d'MORISSIO" project
I continued to adhere strictly to the rules in protection of the
environment and the land on the site set out above for the "1N"
phase.
This involved: extreme limitation of the number of treatments
using agricultural chemicals, and integrated pest management only
when essential; rejection of the use of herbicides to eliminate
the weeds that overrun the vineyards; and the exclusive use of
mechanical means, integrated by hand-hoeing.
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Thinning
of site "1N"
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I should point out that my way of working is stricter than the
rules laid down by EC Regulation n°2078/92, which allows the use
of certain types of low-impact weed-killers.
Like the entire production of the estate, the wine-making process
used to make the MONPRIVATO "Cà d'MORISSIO" selection is traditional,
with the fermentation followed by a long maceration of the wine
must in contact with the skins for 25-28 days, while the juice
is softly pumped over the cap to extract all the noble tannins
in the grapes.
The
wine is then matured in casks of Slavonian oak holding 25-27 hectoliters
which are not new but undergo careful maintenance.
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