Wine Guide Archives - Out There Venture https://outthereventure.com/tag/wine-guide/ Mon, 27 Apr 2020 18:22:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://outthereoutdoors.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/cropped-OTO_new-favicon-32x32.jpg Wine Guide Archives - Out There Venture https://outthereventure.com/tag/wine-guide/ 32 32 Outdoor Vino https://outthereventure.com/outdoor-vino/ Sun, 29 Apr 2018 04:26:10 +0000 https://outthereventure.com/?p=33946 Sure, flasks are fine. And these days it’s easy to find those nifty stainless-steel canisters that hold an entire bottle of wine. There are even bladders made for wine carrying. Outdoor Vino has them all beat with its line of wines specifically for outdoor travel. While the names of these wines hint at their outdoor […]

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Sure, flasks are fine. And these days it’s easy to find those nifty stainless-steel canisters that hold an entire bottle of wine. There are even bladders made for wine carrying. Outdoor Vino has them all beat with its line of wines specifically for outdoor travel. While the names of these wines hint at their outdoor design, the bottle is where it’s at: each wine bottle is made of shatter-proof, BPA-free plastic, making for a bottle that’s one-sixth the weight of a traditional glass bottle. The production of Outdoor Vino bottles is also eco-friendly compared to glass bottle production. The bottles are screw-top, so you won’t have to pack a corkscrew.

Outdoor Vino has four wine options: Wanderlust White (a white blend with tasting notes of pink grapefruit, cantaloupe, and orange), Rambling Red (a blend of Cabernet and Merlot), Sundress Sweet (flavors of honeysuckle, pear, and apricot), or Picnic Table Pink (a rosé with notes of strawberry and melon).

 

Photo of Outdoor Vino's Rambling Red in the outdoors.
Photo: Lisa Laughlin

 

Outdoor Vino’s goal is to make wine more accessible in the outdoor places you love. The lightweight bottles fit easily in the side pocket of a hiking pack or the rack of a bicycle. They’re great for beaches, mountain ridges, or backyard dinners. They’re also a good option for kayak or paddle board adventures, as the bottles float.

The wine for Outdoor Vino comes from the award-winning Naked Winery, based in Oregon. Their website (outdoorvino.com) makes for easy ordering, and each bottle is just $18. If it turns out you’re not a fan of the wine, the plastic screw-top design makes for easy washing and re-use, so you can bring your favorite wine on your next outdoor adventure. The company additionally offers outdoor-friendly wine amenities such as silicone “Happy Camper” glasses to take places that don’t allow glass. Cheers! //

 

Feature photo: Rambling Red by the campfire at West Oval Lake. // Lisa Laughlin

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Hiking in Wine Country: Pair Sagebrush Walking with Wine Tasting in the Tri-Cities https://outthereventure.com/hiking-in-wine-country-pair-sagebrush-walking-with-wine-tasting-in-the-tri-cities/ Sat, 26 Mar 2016 01:00:59 +0000 https://outthereventure.com/?p=19158 Sharing the same latitude as the legendary Burgundy and Bordeaux wine regions of France, the Tri-Cities of central Washington have taken advantage of rich soil and sunny, arid conditions to establish a wine-making region of growing renown. But Kennewick, Richland and Pasco have also quietly begun to develop a reputation as an outdoor recreation destination […]

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Sharing the same latitude as the legendary Burgundy and Bordeaux wine regions of France, the Tri-Cities of central Washington have taken advantage of rich soil and sunny, arid conditions to establish a wine-making region of growing renown. But Kennewick, Richland and Pasco have also quietly begun to develop a reputation as an outdoor recreation destination amidst one of the fastest-growing metropolitan areas in the nation, thanks to an impressive, loosely connected network of urban trail systems.

The same qualities that produce award-winning wine entice winter-weary hikers; a scant six to eight inches of rain mist the Tri-Cities each year, most of it in the winter, and ample sunshine sweetens grapes and wildflowers alike.

The multi-user trail system at the 650-acre Badger Mountain Centennial Preserve in Richland anchors the area’s Ridges to Rivers Open Space Network, an ambitious plan to link undeveloped lands. Two primary trailheads access the mountain from the east and west; the western portal is the easiest for out-of-towners to reach and provides convenient access to nearby wineries.

Photo: Aaron Theisen
Photo: Aaron Theisen

The most popular route is the Skyline Trail, which features impressive ridgeline hiking for minimal climbing effort. This is one of the Tri-Cities’ most popular trail systems, so prepare to share the trail – nearly 200,000 hikers, bikers, dog-walkers and equestrians access the Skyline Trail each year. But the spectacular ridgeline route is worth the company, and so are the views of the arid Columbia and Yakima river basins; the pristine Hanford Reach; nearby Candy, Red and Rattlesnake mountains; and, on a clear day, distant Mounts Adams and Rainier, their angular summits in stark contrast to the orderly rows of grapes below.

Near at hand, springtime flowers – lupine, arrowleaf balsamroot, phlox, vetch, larkspur, lomatium and more – punctuate the sweetly pungent sage. And all around is the surprising hum of springtime life on the Columbia Plateau, where raptors perch on vineyard fenceposts, coyotes trot on the skyline, and rodents – and rattlesnakes – move underfoot.

Hikers can connect the Skyline Trail to the popular Trailhead Park trailhead via the Sagebrush Trail for an out-and-back, or they can make a loop around Badger with the Langdon Trail, which stays low on the south side of the mountain. Either way, it’s a round trip just shy of 8 miles – or enough calories to cancel out several glasses of wine.

Getting There: From Interstate 182 in Richland, take Queensgate Exit 3A. Drive south on Queensgate to the intersection at Keene Road. Turn right and proceed 2.1 miles to Dallas Road.  Drive 1.4 miles to the large trailhead parking area on the left.

Post-Hike Wine Tasting around Badger Mountain

Just south of the Skyline trailhead sits Goose Ridge Winery and its 2,200-acre vineyard – the largest contiguous plot of grapes in the region. Goose Ridge grows grapes on contract for many of the large regional labels, but its small-barrel special reserve grapes are the star of the French farmhouse tasting room, their character reflective of the Columbia Plateau’s landscape: bright and airy. They impart the essence of fruit without being, well, fruity – perfect for spring sipping.

Despite its top-shelf pedigree, Goose Ridge Winery has the laid-back atmosphere of much of the Tri-Cities; go ahead and play bocce ball in hiking boots. Finish with a sunset drive up to nearby Goose Ridge, or taste your way around Badger Mountain with a stop at Kitzke Cellars just to the north of the Skyline trailhead. //

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