
| Elevation | 735 ft approx |
| Pruning Technique | Cane |
| Clusters per vine | 9 |
| Harvest Date | September 25, 2006 |
| Bottling Date | August 27, 2007 |
| Release Date | May 1, 2008 |
| pH | 3.62 |
| Total Acid | .60 |
| Alcohol | 14.5% |
| Time in Oak | 11 Months |
| Type of Oak | 100% French oak |
| Yield | 2.52 Tons per acre |
| Production | 38 Barrels |
Tasting Notes
Unadulterated and pure in essence, this wine is marked by a balance of bright fruit and a firm backbone that is typical of a cool-climate Pinot. A luscious, substantial Pinot Noir, the wine has fresh, red fruit character with some spices and earthy tones at the end. Soft, chalky tannins combine with smooth acidity to create a weighty mouthfeel that lingers on your palate. This wine is a symphony, not a one note samba.
Other Signaterra Wines

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Elegant. Confident. Graceful.
Our Bella Luna Pinot Noir from the Russian River Valley is a signature wine. The individuality of the vineyard, the fingerprint of the vintage and the acumen of the winemaker are joined in each bottle. Expressing the marks of these three forces—earth, nature, and man—is fundamental to our mission, our philosophy
and the wine we call Signaterra.
Winemaker Notes
Earth: This vineyard produces superlative Pinot Noir grapes. Tucked against a grove of redwoods, it is one of the more cool-climate vineyards in all of Russian River. Less than nine miles from the coast, Bella Luna's complex Gold Ridge soils and consistent slope produce grapes that ripen slowly and evenly. It is planted to Pinot Noir clones 115, 667 and 777. In 2006, the vineyard was farmed using high-level sustainable farming practices and is now in transition to official Demeter Biodynamic® certification.
Nature: Bella Luna has clear marine influences. The 2006 vintage brought in soft fogs from the coast that brushed across Bella Luna on their way to rest in the Russian River Valley. This kept temperatures mild, a good 7 to 8° F cooler in the summer than in inland locations, and helped guard against the erratic temperature swings and hot spells that can affect more easterly Russian River locations. There is also little variance in temperature from day to night at Bella Luna. This allows acidity to develop gradually and consistently in the grapes throughout the night hours—making for complex and well-developed grapes at harvest.
Man: We handled this wine with great tenderness and care and a minimum of intervention. The grapes were hand-harvested at night in cool temperatures to keep the sugars intact and the fruit fresh. Instead of crushing, the Pinot Noir was gently destemmed, keeping the whole berries undamaged. The fruit and juice were gravity fed into open-topped fermenters and cold soaked for five to six days to extract color and red cherry aromas. Native yeast fermentation gives this wine an extra layer of complexity, adding earthy aromas and gentle tannins. We're taking a risk to depend entirely on native yeasts, but we think the seamlessness of the wine is well worth it. Finally, the wine underwent concurrent spontaneous malolactic fermentation over a four-month period.
