Tag Archives: vineyards

Project 24: Ciccone Vineyards

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Not far from Forty-Five North, you’ll find Ciccone Vineyards. Tony and Joan Ciccone started planting vines in 1995 — by hand, a true labor of love. These two are passionate about making wine (can you see the trend going on up here?).Tony says its in his DNA as a son in an Italian family who — like many Italians of that time — made wine in the basement for personal consumption. Tony did so like his father before him.

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At 84, his enthusiasm has not faded. After raising eight kids, you might think you’d find these two sailing the shores of Lake Michigan, feet up and wine in hand, instead of under their fingernails, so to speak. But no. While this scene, they admit, is tempting, working hard for something they love — like this land — is where it is at for them. “If it’s in your blood to work hard,” he warns me, “you won’t stop. It’s what you love.”

I just hope at 84 I’m still putting the brush to canvas as well as Tony still makes wine. He is training his daughter, Paula, and son, Mario, to take over someday. Paula is the assistant winemaker, and Tony even admits sometimes she knows best — a good sign for the future of Ciccone. One thing is for sure, tradition and love and history are deeply steeped at this vineyard, like at so many along the trail. I could stay and talk all day, but I do have a job to do, so I reluctantly leave Tony and Joan to their work.

While I explore the property looking for a place to paint, I could have chosen many spots, but when the view of East Grand Traverse Bay — vines in the foreground, Power Island in the background — unfolded before me, up went my easel. I would have stayed into the night had the rains not come. The view was so lovely, I even painted through the drizzle until the rain began to wash away my painting and, with a sigh, I called it a day!

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Stay tuned for more adventures from Project 24!

Project 24: Forty-Five North

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We’ll circle back to Good Harbor in a bit, but first …

It was a warm, sunny day, perfect in every way: crisp, clear and inviting. Time spent on the Leelanau Peninsula can feel that way in any weather (though locals tell me winter can be brutal). When I visit, I just find it magical. Who knows — maybe it is! I’m sure there is more than one winemaker in the region that hopes I’m right about the magic; they may need just a little of that after two particularly hard winters in a row. Still, I think these guys can do it. Winemakers in Michigan have a true pioneering, get-things-done, we-can-do-it attitude. Certainly the winemakers from Forty-Five North and Ciccone Vineyards — the next two stops on my list — both do. I’ll start at Forty-Five North, where I got swallowed up for an entire afternoon.

Joyfully and blissfully, I lost hours in my painting and meeting the oh-so-lovely and crazy knowledgeable Channing Sutton. She’s passionate about this county, this land, the wine and people who make it and you the visitors, she passionate about you too. She’s passionate about Forty-Five North and couldn’t be happier that this is a Leelanau Conservancy property. More on that later, but for now, it is suffice to say that Channing knows a lot about a lot. I quit taking notes at some point and enjoyed absorbing what I could. If you come to Forty-Five North (and you should), ask for Channing, then listen. She will connect you to this land and vineyard, and isn’t that what wine is ultimately: a connection to the land?

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Channing Sutton

Forty-Five North is super excited about their winemaker, Jay Briggs, who — like Channing — loves his job and is deeply committed to this land and his craft: making stellar wines.

My encouragement is go see for yourself, experience the latitude!

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Next up: We’ll visit Ciccone! Stay tuned …