Bartman
Senior Member
Seems like you recognize most of the salient issues. Standard 'fine wine' grapes (cab. sauv., Syrah, Merlot, Chardonnay, etc.) won't grow well in middle America, but building a market for the lesser-known but better-adapted grape varieties is a slow, arduous process. That's part of what I meant about the difference between farming and selling the produce (which is a big enough job in the first place) and the time, expense and uncertainty of making and selling wine to the public. Farming has its own challenges, expenses and uncertainty, of course, but it's a totally different 'opponent'. Mother nature is unpredictable, but certain effects reliably follow certain causes (drought necessitates watering and often leads to disease, both of which affect the final product); the wine-buying public seems to have very little rationality or predictability - what sells well at one time/year may do poorly the next, and most individuals' tastes are more fickle than even Mother Nature. Convincing the local population that they should buy your "weird" wine that they have never heard of before can be very difficult, is my understanding.