Subscribe to Wine Camp


Add to Google

 
Subscribe in a reader

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner


Cornerstone Cellars's Facebook profile

Craig Camp's Facebook profile
My Links

View Craig Camp's profile on LinkedIn

Share on Facebook


Blog directory

Powered by Squarespace
Wine Camp: Publishing online since 2003
Top Ranked on the AlaWine
100 Top Wine Blogs

Listed on All Top Wine Blogs

Ranked in the world’s top 15 wine sites by Cellarer.com


Named one of the top
Wine Blog authors by
Food and Wine Magazine

finalistlogo.jpg

Thank you for visiting Wine Camp. I created Wine Camp to promote the discussion of terroir driven wines in a points free environment. I believe the current addiction to the 100 point scale pulls many consumers away from wines with grace, complexity and a true sense of place. Here you will find no rankings and all of the wines in my wine notes are recommended. The only exception you’ll find is if I think a particular brand is a consumer rip-off that needs exposing as in this post.

Add to Technorati Favorites Join My Community at MyBloglog!
My Zimbio
Current Topics
Great Places to Buy Wines With a Terroir-ist Twist
Login
« OPN: Wines Worth Drinking- Puffeney Poulsard | Main | Going to School »
Friday
12Jun2009

Going to School 2

When I first got into wine I spent as much time with my nose in a wine book as it did in a wine glass - come to think of it that’s still true. That was thirty years ago and wine books were serious things in those days - thick tomes by British writers that read like the textbooks they were. I learned a lot, but it was a rather dry experience, which seemed a bit of an oxymoron when the subject was wine. I balanced the books with a tasting group that was loaded with energy - we had a blast and learned a lot.

One of the most exciting things about the online wine community (bloggers, Twitter, Facebook etc.) is they have expanded the online wine world into one gigantic virtual tasting group. Not to say studying about wine is any less important, perhaps more so now there are so many more wines, but the amount you can learn about wine on the Internet is truly astounding.

One of the most charming aspects of the explosion of wine blogs is the large number of young wine drinkers who share their thrill of exploration with their readers. They’re not really critics, but more like the host of a wine tasting. Visiting their blog is like visiting their home for a wine tasting party. Yes, sometimes there may be some inaccurate technical information, but the energy and love of wine they share more than makes up for it. They’re learning along with you, not pontificating from up on high.

I love to visit these blogs as they recharge my batteries with their enthusiasm and make me remember my excitement of discovery when I first fell in love with the world of wine. We all should remember it’s less important to get the pH of a wine right than it is to feel its spirit - its soul. These writers are about soul not technical sheets and I love them for it. These are the writers that are giving birth to a new generation of wine drinkers that, while it will be a small percentage of them, will be drinking the wines that the writers in my previous post,“Going to School” are writing about now. This new generation will preserve those wines as my generation drops the wine list. They represent a passing of the torch even if they don’t yet know it or appreciate the beauties of Poulsard yet, but some of them will some day. Eventually they, and a sadly small percentage of their readers, will turn away from the obvious side of the force and learn to love finesse over sheer power. This is the way of the wine world and it will always be so. It’s a right of passage. I went through it too.

Here’s a woefully short list of these young leaders. It’s a dangerous thing to make such a list as there are so many talented wine bloggers out there. So my apologies to the majority that I leave out here as I include just a few I’ve had the pleasure to meet personally. I encourage you to visit my blog roll or the ones on Vinography or Fermentation to really experience the beautiful diversity of these new, new media wine writers, which interestingly are mostly female. Change is a good thing.

 

 

 


EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (3)

Hi Craig!

Thanks for the shout out!

Looking forward to seeing you at WBC again this year!

Megan

June 12, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSonadora

ditto Craig! Thanks for the shout out! It's all to easy to get jaded. I appreciate your appreciation. :)

cheers,
Becky

June 14, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterTaster B

Craig:

Excellent post and what you said best is the fact that emotion counts for so much, especially when it comes to a sensual experience like tasting wine.

It's always nice to read your thoughts which are almost always positive!

June 22, 2009 | Unregistered Commentertom hyland

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>