Our Viognier is now being served in the Enomatic machines at Kybecca's Wine Bar
in Downtown Fredericksburg, stop in and have a glass!
Free the Grapes!
www.freethegrapes.org
How Did This All Start?
Since 1990, the number of American bonded
wineries has tripled and total wine consumption has increased 32% to 670 million
gallons. With at least one winery in each state, wine country tourism has helped
to satisfy America’s growing interest in wine. But heightened tourism exposed
weaknesses in wine distribution. In fact, only 17% of wineries are distributed
nationally, and 54% of them were unable to find a wholesaler in states where
they actively sought representation, according to a 2003 membership study by
Wine Institute, a public policy trade association representing 900+ California
wineries. Most wineries are small, family-owned and operated and
direct-to-consumer sales offered them a pressure relief valve to satisfy
consumer demand. And emerging wineries could “seed” new state markets prior to
seeking broader distribution through a wholesaler, who had the infrastructure
and sales teams to cost-effectively distribute wines to restaurants and
retailers. But the middle wholesaler tier consolidated from more than 5,000
wholesaler companies in the 1970s to around 500 today, while the number of wines
introduced each year is estimated to exceed 130,000ii. Wineries,
wholesalers and consumers fit a classic “hourglass” shape, where the flow of
products from producers is constricted in a narrowing middle tier before it gets
to consumers. And the two ends – wineries and consumers – are growing in sheer
number. Consumers in tasting rooms increasingly asked, “Where can I buy your
wine?” The answer was frequently, “only here at the winery.”
More information on www.freethegrapes.org