Thursday, April 22, 2010

Reclaimed Rain Barrel Project Alternative with Wine Barrels

SoCal RAIN BARREL PROGRAM

That is why we offer this incredible alternative to you. Contact Used Wine Barrels in Sacramento for a Eco-friendly Green Alternative using Used Oak Wine Barrels from Napa Valley, California.



Rain Barrels from www.usedwinebarrels.com
These beautiful pieces of history will enhance your landscape is the most Eco-friendly way to preserve Rain Water for your plants, animals, or even your hair. Made from authentic Napa Valley Used Wine Barrels, these rain barrels will be the talk of your neighborhood.
Buy 2 and hook them together for double the capacity.

Contact www.usedwinebarrels.com/ or call Lisa at 1-866-75-BARRELS (866-752-2773)

Isn't that what it is all about?
Also, check out our planter barrels, wine barrel cabinets, and more.

Tuesday, April 06, 2010

Barrels - Why are they used?

g Wine Site
Peter F May
BellaOnline's Wine Editor

g

Barrels - Why are they used?

Wooden barrels were once the standard goods container. Peter F May asked today's winemakers why they still used this archaic reminder of the past.



Captain Jack Aubrey tossed empty barrels from his ship as targets for his gun crews to practise shooting. Barrels were common enough to be disposable. Barrels held the salted beef and dried beans sailors ate, flour they made bread from and the water they drank. Wooden barrels were the standard packaging of the age used on land as well as sea. Consumers bought goods loose from barrels in stores and so wineries used barrels to ferment and store wines. Wines were exported in barrel and as recently as fifty years ago wine merchants would themselves bottle the produce of even famous Bordeaux chateaux. Ships were rated by how many tuns, or barrels, they could carry and the term tonnage survives to this day

Now barrels have disappeared from daily life. The only place to see barrels in common use is wineries and distilleries. Any tour of a winery will involve the barrel cellar where one’s guide will proudly boast of the number of new oak barrels purchased every year to age wine and explain they can be used for only a few years before being replaced. And they may disclose the individual cost: a French oak barrel costs around $700. Visitors will do -mental arithmetic and wonder at the investment in front of them.

If the look of the cellar hasn’t changed for centuries, the rest of the winery has. Few now ferment in wooden barrels. Gleaming temperature controlled stainless steel tanks are more hygienic and easier to control. The old wooden press has been moved outside the gift shop for visitors to photograph and grapes are now gently squeezed under computer control by air pressure in a nylon bladder. And many wineries have left behind traditional corks for metal screw caps and alternative closures.

So why do wineries still use wooden barrels to age wine? They are expensive and so add a significant amount to the price of a bottle of finished wine. There are two things that barrels do when aging wine. The first is to allow a small amount of oxygen through pores in the wood which helps change the character of the wine as it ages and the second is that contact with wood adds tannins and an oak flavour to the wine.

But you don’t need barrels to do this. You can use modern stainless steel tanks and suspend staves or bags of oak chips in the wine to add tannins and oak tones and pump oxygen into the tank in a process known as micro-oxygenation.

And this is what is done with inexpensive wines.

So why do so many persist with using wooden barrels? The answer winemakers have given me is that traditional barrels make successful wines. They say that they’ll reconsider when wines made without barrels start winning awards and scoring high points.




Peter F May is the author of Marilyn Merlot and the Naked Grape: Odd Wines from Around the World which features more than 100 wine labels and the stories behind them, and PINOTAGE: Behind the Legends of South Africa’s Own Wine which tells the story behind the Pinotage wine and grape.


for wine barrels, planters, furniture
www.usedwinebarrels.com
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Thursday, April 01, 2010

Suggestions for Planting a Wine Barrel Container

By Jamie Witt, eHow Contributing Writer
http://www.ehow.com/way_5779598_suggestions-planting-wine-barrel-container.html

Recycled wine barrels can give an outdoor space a rustic, vintage look. And using them as planters can enhance their look. Because of their height, wine barrels are ideal for vine plantings, because they can cascade down the side of the barrel. But any annual should grow well in this type of container. Note that wine barrels will break down more quickly if they are used as outdoor planters, especially with exposure to cold temperatures. If you have a highly prized and expensive wine barrel, you might not want to use it as a planter.

Choose Plantings

1. Choose your plantings. It's a good idea to vary plant height and color. Plan to fill a wine barrel planter each spring.
Clean and Fill
2. Clean the wine barrel container gently by rinsing it with the garden hose. Drill a few holes in the bottom for drainage, and lay gauze or rocks on the bottom. Line the inside of a planter that will be outside in cold weather before filling it with potting soil. This will help prevent damage, such as warping, as the soil expands and contracts.
Fill the barrel almost to the top with potting soil, leaving 10 inches to a foot of space between the soil and the top of the planter. This will take about five to seven large bags of potting soil.
Plant and Maintain
3. Dig holes in the potting soil, place a plant in each hole, and fill in to secure the roots. Water as needed.

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Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Napa Wine Country - Wine Barrel Information

From now on, find the latest in news and events for the Napa Valley Wine festivals, Lodi, and Sacramento, San Juaquin Wine News and wine tasting winery tours and venues. Everything from Wine Cellar and accessories to were you can find wine barrel furniture, wine racks, bottle tops, and wine barrel fountains.

Visit www.usedwinebarrels.com for all your accessories.

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

WINE TOUR

By Helen & Bernie Davis(Helen & Bernie Davis)

The barrels are only used twice. The barrels are oak. The oak (the barrels actually) come from France. The oak comes from different forests in France, and the barrels bear different trade marks. The oak that is best for one wine comes ...

- http://bdhdwaysouth.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, February 08, 2005

Elk Grove Blvd Elk Grove Business Directory Sacramento CA

Elk Grove Blvd Elk Grove Business Directory Sacramento CA: "WINE BARREL CLASSIFIEDS
WINE BARREL CLASSIFIEDS: 'Used Barrel Board > View Posting > Used Wine Barrels


Used Barrel Title:Used Wine Barrels
Barrel Location:Elk Grove, CA
Listing Date:01/18/2005

Used Barrel Description

Year:mixed
Wine Type:mixed
Oak:mixed Oak
Style/Size:mixed
Quanity:25 Barrels
Price:$55 Per Barrel

Comments:
Very fine looking barrels. MUST SELL. Any questions, please call or see our website at www.usedwinebarrels.com

Contact Information:
Name: Lisa Lombardo
Company: UsedWineBarrels.com
Email: info@usedwinebarrels.com
Phone: 916-203-5472 '
posted by calflash @ 12:14 AM 0 comments "