About the trip...
Tom and Nella came from Toronto to visit Tom's brother, Jasper, in Palo Alto. We spent four days around Palo Alto, on the Coast, in San Fran, and in Napa. It was the 2nd time in the area for both of us, and again we were impressed - this is an awesome place. There is tons to do and see, the weather is great, the landscape is beautiful, and they have preserved a suprising amount of greenspace and wilderness. The only real problem with the trip was lack of time: four days just isn't enough.
Two very nice wineries in Dry Creek of Sonoma are Preston and Bella, again neither require appointments.
Appointment only wineries of course require that you make an appointment. Depending on the winery, some are "walk in appointment only" and the serious app only ones def will want you to call ahead of time - several days up to several weeks depending on the winery. This time of year is less busy in general so usually you can get in if you call within a week.
Sonoma tends to be lower key than Napa (in general), for the most part has less International recognition, and is more spread out compared to Napa which is situated along a well defined geographical valley. The wines are excellent in both counties :)
Hope this helps
David Thompson
No problem, just caught your post here 4 days ago. I've been to almost 400 Napa wineries so its tough to condense!! You mentioned liking Red Wine - theres certainly no shortage of that in Napa! A week definitely gives you some time to have fun :)
Here are just a few of my recommendations - if you need more, do a yahoo or google search for: Napa Wine Project and my site will come up. These are all appointment only wineries.
Spring Mountain is a beautiful less visited part of Napa than the valley floor.
Domain Charbay is awesome, they do have red wine but they also concentrate on ports and spirits
The best views in the Napa Valley as well as having beautiful grounds are from Kuleto Estate (variety of reds) and Constant Diamond Mountain (cab sav & cab franc).
Spottswood in St. Helena has a 1x week tour on Friday - unbelievable reserve Cabernet.
Quixote is worth visiting - syrahs and cab sav. Very nice tour and amazing eclectic winery.
Hendry winery has some of the most informative tours in the valley - def ask for George Hendry as he makes these tours.
Bourassa just south of Napa is the only winery I know of that combines a short tour of a cooperage (barrel making facility).
If you want another different experience, Delectus makes some good wines - they are located in a business park but have decorated the interior very nicely. Tell Elizabeth I mentioned their winery :)
These are just some of the wineries that stick out - I would be happy to help more with recommendations and or your trip if you contact me off list using the contact section on my website.
Best regards,
David Thompson
I would love your help on winery suggestions. We're planning a trip in mid-march and staying in Napa for a week. We enjoy the smaller, family owned vineyards. We also prefer Red Wine. Any recommendations would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
I have personally visited over 350 wineries in the Napa Valley and would be happy to share my experiences or make any winery recommendations. I am very familiar with the Napa Valley and I enjoy sharing information.