Wednesday, 4 June 2014

absolument!..a blog from Steve

Well, it finally happened - I made the time to write the blog I promised Amanda! I guess that is the first point - making time for stuff is a challenge we all face on a daily basis, as we spend our day reacting to what happens to us , rather than sorting out the urgent and important, from the really important and doing what only we can do, instead of getting involved in detail that doesn’t need our time. 


As I have been juggling the next phase of development at Grusson and helping my friend Andrew with his renovation around his pool and keeping the grass cut and place tidy at Grusson I have spent too little time on equalta. 

However I always had an excuse - I’m getting older and tire more easily, there’s too much going on in my head, I need to rest etc. well it’s time to ‘fess up - it’s ….ocks!!! Whether consciously or not I had prioritised, I had decided where to spend my time and effort AND for the past few months it was in the wrong place!!!!!  Having a small business working from home requires a different set of disciplines and has different frustrations from working in a corporate environment  - the making of your own routine, rather than by being driven by a meeting schedule; choosing the projects you want to do, rather than what the strategic plan did say but got changed by the boss's boss's focus on this months numbers, the list goes on. 


The key point here is about decision making, making choices and making choices involves thinking through situations and to do that effectively requires three key components: you, some tools and the right environment. We have created the environment we have a whole host of tools we just need you.


So, do yourself , your family and your organisation a big favour - come and spend some time with me and Amanda at Grusson - thinking about what’s on YOUR mind.

Tuesday, 13 May 2014

...planting the 2014 Cabernet Sauvignon vines

So off I went - day 1 and got to the first dug hole. Yikes! it was so baked solid that I couldn't do anything with it (end of March 23 degrees or as I call it "factor 30 weather"). It is all very well having a mega horse power tractor digging holes but I just had my hands to re-fill for the little plants. In the end I took a lump hammer to the "soil" and softened it with water. I think I planted 7 on that first day.

On day 3 it rained, so stopped play at lunchtime, and life was sooo much easier on day 4. I had no idea quite how much difference water could have on soil, I think I was on about 35 by the end of day 5.

But at the weekend, after I had managed 55 so far, the cavalry arrived in the form of Ian, and low and behold we finished the other 45 in a day and a half! How does that happen!


Meanwhile Steve had finished putting all the posts in, single handedly mowed and strimmed the whole vineyard AND made an amazing Sunday lunch, complete with giant Yorkshire puddings and onion gravy, which we had in the barn.



So on to the wine tasting....

Tuesday, 22 April 2014

long time...

...since I posted about the vine growing and winemaking antics at Grusson (and all the building and restoration going on - I'm on a promise from Steve for a blog from him about that!). Mainly because I didn't want it to become same old-same old.

However I thought you might be interested to hear some stuff now, many months later!

I'll tell you about the October 2013 wine making in a later blog, this one will be about the April 2014 planting of the new vines and here they are!

Yep, 101 of them (they sent one extra). Now - we had only ever intended to plant another 50 BUT my supplier had disappeared off the face of the earth, and the only other supplier I could identify had a minimum order of 100.

So my birthday present from Steve and Dave was about 106 vine holes and about 35 post holes and 35 posts and wire and tensioners for them all. What a lucky girl!

I only really heard the details of the hole making later from Dave. It was done with the auger on the back of the tractor, which was both much, much easier than digging and at times harder, with moments of it slipping and sliding all over the place. But I just thought it was awesome to have them all done for me. That is until I got there and started to look into the detail (it was still awesome but not quite as easy to just plant the vines as I might have imagined!).


So enough for now, I hope you look forward to the next installment!