You have to remember: there are hundreds of thousands of
vinyards in the world, all trying to sell to the twelve or so mass market wine buyers in the UK.
I have visited several
vinyards in the south of england (below London) and they have told me this.
Not exact matches
3 trips to New York 2 adventures
in places I've never been before (NOLA + Havana) Tried casual sex twice (spoiler alert: I AM TERRIBLE AT IT) 1 weekend spent
in a tiny home on a
vinyard 2 mended friendships 6 times deleting all of my online dating profiles (and just as many re-building them) 1 book pitch to a publisher 11 hair colour changes 1 new nephew (honorary nephew, but still!)
It just kinda rolled out and kept rolling and then some broke Geek decided to do a dinner and pan-handled bloggers for some wine and stuff and the next thing y» know, it's like the
in thing and well I guess a blogging marketing fine wine well suited clothing type guy named Hugh just picked up the thread and took it on and it like grew so wild and humungous man and then everyone wanted
in on the wine stuff and that just like freaked out the
vinyard down south into sending cases of the stuff all over the world just
in case they would kinda infect the brand with a virus thing and then hope they'd sneeze and spread their spit and the viral cold or flu thingy to take hold and sortoflike get its own traction and move to wider audiences who were now into asking Victoria Wine outlet staff for the wine and confusing the dudes into placing an order to meet the demand like and it is still like viralling out there.
I despise all that «hummingbirds gathering nectar
in the morning light» heterosexual - girlyman
vinyard lifestyle - porn crap.
When I wrote my original post about worm composting becoming big business, I reported that some
vinyards were claiming a huge reduction
in plant losses and disease problems after applications of worm compost to their soils.