[Federal Register: August 15, 2005 (Volume 70, Number 156)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Page 47740-47754]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr15au05-16]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau
27 CFR Part 9
[Notice No. 50]
RIN 1513-AA82 thru 1513-AA88
Proposed Alta Mesa, Borden Ranch, Clements Hills, Cosumnes River,
Jahant, Mokelumne River, and Sloughhouse Viticultural Areas
AGENCY: Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau proposes to
establish seven new viticultural areas within the boundary of the
existing Lodi viticultural area, which lies within southern Sacramento
and northern San Joaquin Counties in California. The seven proposed
areas are Alta Mesa, Borden Ranch, Clements Hills, Cosumnes River,
Jahant, Mokelumne River, and Sloughhouse. We designate viticultural
areas to allow vintners to better describe the origin of their wines
and to allow consumers to better identify wines they may purchase. We
invite comments on these proposed additions to our regulations.
DATES: We must receive written comments on or before October 14, 2005.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments to any of the following addresses:
Chief, Regulations and Procedures Division, Alcohol and
Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau, Attn: Notice No. 50, P.O. Box 14412,
Washington, DC 20044-4412.
202-927-8525 (facsimile).
nprm@ttb.gov (e-mail).
http://www.ttb.gov/alcohol/rules/index.htm. An online
comment form is posted with this notice on our Web site.
http://www.regulations.gov (Federal e-rulemaking portal;
follow instructions for submitting comments).
You may view copies of this notice, the petition, the appropriate
maps, and any comments we receive about this proposal by appointment at
the TTB Library, 1310 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20220. To make an
appointment, call 202-927-2400. You may also access copies of the
notice and comments online at http://www.ttb.gov/alcohol/rules/index.htm
.
See the Public Participation section of this notice for specific
instructions and requirements for submitting comments, and for
information on how to request a public hearing.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: N.A. Sutton, Alcohol and Tobacco Tax
and Trade Bureau, Regulations and Procedures Division, 925 Lakeville
St., No. 158, Petaluma, California 94952; telephone 415-271-1254.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background on Viticultural Areas
TTB Authority
Section 105(e) of the Federal Alcohol Administration Act (the FAA
Act, 27 U.S.C. 201 et seq.) requires that alcohol beverage labels
provide consumers with adequate information regarding product identity
and prohibits the use of misleading information on those labels. The
FAA Act also authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to issue
regulations to carry out its provisions. The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax
and Trade Bureau (TTB) administers these regulations.
Part 4 of the TTB regulations (27 CFR part 4) allows the
establishment of definitive viticultural areas and the use of their
names as appellations of origin on wine labels and in wine
advertisements. Part 9 of the TTB regulations (27 CFR part 9) contains
the list of approved viticultural areas.
Definition
Section 4.25(e)(1)(i) of the TTB regulations (27 CFR 4.25(e)(1)(i))
defines a viticultural area for American wine as a delimited grape-
growing region distinguishable by geographical features, the boundaries
of which have been recognized and defined in part 9 of the regulations.
These designations allow vintners and consumers to attribute a given
quality, reputation, or other characteristic of a wine made from grapes
grown in an area to its geographical origin. The establishment of
viticultural areas allows vintners to describe more accurately the
origin of their wines to consumers and helps consumers to identify
wines they may purchase. Establishment of a viticultural area is
neither an approval nor an endorsement by TTB of the wine produced in
that area.
Requirements
Section 4.25(e)(2) of the TTB regulations outlines the procedure
for proposing an American viticultural area and provides that any
interested party may petition TTB to establish a grape-growing region
as a viticultural area. Section 9.3(b) of the TTB regulations requires
the petition to include--
Evidence that the proposed viticultural area is locally
and/or nationally known by the name specified in the petition;
Historical or current evidence that supports setting the
boundary of the proposed viticultural area as the petition specifies;
Evidence relating to the geographical features, such as
climate, elevation, physical features, and soils, that distinguish the
proposed viticultural area from surrounding areas;
A description of the specific boundary of the proposed
viticultural area, based on features found on United States Geological
Survey (USGS) maps; and
A copy of the appropriate USGS map(s) with the proposed
viticultural area's boundary prominently marked.
Lodi American Viticultural Areas Steering Committee Petitions
The Lodi American Viticultural Areas (LAVA) Steering Committee has
petitioned TTB to establish seven new viticultural areas within the
boundary of the existing Lodi viticultural area (27 CFR 9.107) in
southern Sacramento and northern San Joaquin Counties in California.
The seven LAVA Steering Committee petitions propose the creation of the
Alta Mesa, Borden
[[Page 47741]]
Ranch, Clements Hills, Cosumnes River, Jahant, Mokelumne River, and
Sloughhouse viticultural areas. The 16 wine industry members that
comprise the committee state that their proposal subdivides the
existing Lodi area into ``seven smaller viticultural areas of
distinction.''
The establishment of the seven proposed viticultural areas would
not in any way affect the existing 551,500-acre Lodi viticultural area.
The Lodi area will continue as a single American viticultural area
within its current boundary. However, TTB notes that the seven proposed
areas fall entirely within the 458,000 acres within the original 1986
boundary of the Lodi viticultural area and thus, as proposed, would not
include any of the 93,500 acres added to the Lodi area when it was
expanded along its western and southern borders in 2002. (See T.D. ATF-
223, published in the Federal Register on February 13, 1986 (51 FR
5324) for the Lodi viticultural area as originally defined. See T.D.
ATF-482, published in the Federal Register on September 4, 2002 (67 FR
56481), for the Lodi area expansion in 2002.)
Proposed Viticultural Areas--Background
Location
The proposed Cosumnes River, Alta Mesa, and Sloughhouse
viticultural areas lie, respectively, in the northwestern, north-
central, and northeastern portions of the existing Lodi viticultural
area and are entirely within Sacramento County. The proposed Clements
Hills and Mokelumne River areas cover, respectively, the southeastern
and southwestern portions of the existing Lodi viticultural area and
are entirely within San Joaquin County. The proposed Borden Ranch and
Jahant areas cover, respectively, the east-central and central portions
of the existing Lodi viticultural area and lie in portions of both
Sacramento and San Joaquin Counties.
The Cosumnes River flows southwest across the Sacramento County,
portion of the Lodi viticultural area and crosses the proposed
Sloughhouse, Alta Mesa and Cosumnes River viticultural areas. The
Cosumnes River joins the Mokelumne River, which flows west, then
northwest, through the San Joaquin County portion of the Lodi area. The
Mokelumne River crosses the proposed Clements Hills and Mokelumne River
viticultural areas, and forms a portion of the southwestern boundary of
the proposed Jahant area. Neither river touches the proposed Borden
Ranch viticultural area.
Summary of Distinguishing Features
According to the LAVA Steering Committee petition, climate data--
such as temperature, precipitation, and wind patterns--outline the
distinctive microclimates of the seven proposed viticultural areas. To
varying degrees, the petition notes, the Lodi viticultural area's
climate is affected by its inland San Joaquin valley location between
the Sierra Nevada Range to the east and the Sacramento Delta, with its
Pacific coast marine influence, to the west.
Differences in topography, elevation, and soils also help to
distinguish the seven proposed areas from one another, according to the
petition. In addition, the LAVA Committee uses the Storie Index
(Huntington, 1992) to rate the agricultural potential of the soils
within the seven proposed viticultural areas. This index ranges from
100 points for highly suitable soils to 0 points for unsuitable soils.
The petition notes that Storie Index ratings for the seven proposed
areas range from 95 to 15 points.
The table below lists the general features of each of the seven
proposed viticultural areas as outlined in the LAVA Steering Committee
petition:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name of proposed viticultural Relative growing Storie (soil) Location within the Lodi
area Total acreage season length * index viticultural area
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alta Mesa....................... 55,400 3 25-40 north-central.
Borden Ranch.................... 70,000 2 15-30 east-central.
Clements Hills.................. 85,400 2 15-30 southeast.
Cosumnes River.................. 54,700 2 24-40 northwest.
Jahant.......................... 28,000 1 25-40 central.
Mokelumne River................. 85,700 1 80-95 southwest.
Sloughhouse..................... 78,800 4 15-30 northeast.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* 1 = coolest; 4 = warmest.
In addition, the LAVA Steering Committee petition provided an
overview of each proposed area's grape-growing environment, which we
outline in this table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed viticultural area Description
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alta Mesa........................ Intermediate-elevation river terraces
and fans; prairie environment; San
Joaquin soil series of intermediate
age; heavy, red, clay loams;
slightly warmer and less windy
climate than the lowlands to the
west; primarily red grape varietals.
Borden Ranch..................... High elevations, very old river
terraces and hills; oldest valley
floor soils; vernal pools and
prairie mound environment with high
ridges; windy, and warmer, and
wetter climate than lowlands to the
west; primarily red grape varietals.
Clements Hills................... High-elevation river terraces and
hills with older soils and volcanic
sediments; woodland environment;
warmer and wetter climate than
lowlands to the west; primarily red
grape varietals.
Cosumnes River................... Low-elevation meadows and riverbank
woodland environment; diversity of
young soils along floodplain and
sloughs with patches of intermediate-
age soils on river terraces and
fans; cool and windy climate;
primarily white grape varietals.
Jahant........................... Intermediate elevations with erosion,
dissected river terraces and old
floodplain deposits; soils are sandy
at surface and older and cemented at
sub-surface depths; cool and breezy
climate; both red and white grape
varietals.
Mokelumne River.................. Intermediate-to-low-elevation
alluvial fan; prairie environment;
distinctive soils; cool and windy
climate; both red and white grape
varietals.
[[Page 47742]]
Sloughhouse...................... High-elevation river terraces and low
bedrock hills of the Sierra Range;
older soils; woodland environment;
warmer and wetter climate than the
lowlands to the west; both red and
white grape varietals.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Seven Proposed Viticultural Areas
Below, we discuss the name and boundary evidence and distinguishing
features for each of the seven viticultural areas proposed by the LAVA
Steering Committee.
Alta Mesa
The proposed Alta Mesa viticultural area is located in Sacramento
County in the north-central portion of the established Lodi
viticultural area, approximately 21 miles south of the city of
Sacramento and 13 miles north of the city of Lodi. The proposed area
covers 55,400 acres, of which approximately 5,000 acres are planted to
grapes, according to the LAVA Steering Committee petition. This
irregularly shaped, five-sided area is 13.3 miles long north to south,
and 8.3 miles wide at its widest point east to west. The Alta Mesa
region's ``tabletop'' landform and the Joaquin soil series are the
proposed area's distinctive and unifying features, the petition states.
Below, we summarize the evidence presented in the Alta Mesa
petition.
Name Evidence
The petition explains that the name ``Alta Mesa,'' which means
``high table'' in Spanish, reflects California's history under Spanish-
controlled Mexico. The petition states that local ranchers, farmers,
and winemakers refer to this region within the existing Lodi
viticultural area as ``Alta Mesa,'' and notes that the name is also
used for places within the proposed viticultural area. The Alta Mesa
Farm Bureau Hall, which is listed on the National Register of Historic
Places, is on Alta Mesa Road, while the Alta Mesa Fair is held in Elk
Grove and the Alta Mesa Dairy is in Wilton, both of which are within
the proposed area's boundary.
The name ``Alta Mesa'' also appears four times on the USGS
Sloughhouse map within the proposed viticultural area's boundaries. The
map shows the 138-foot high Alta Mesa benchmark and the Alta Mesa
Community Hall in section 9, and the Alta Mesa Gun Club in section 8,
T6N, R7E. Alta Mesa Road runs along the northern and eastern boundaries
of section 5, T6N, R7E, and continues onto the USGS Clay, California,
map. The road serves as part of the Alta Mesa viticultural area's
proposed eastern boundary.
Boundary Evidence
The Alta Mesa tabletop landform and the extent of the Joaquin soil
series generally outline the boundary of the proposed Alta Mesa
viticultural area, according to the petition. The petition explains
that the American and Cosumnes Rivers have built up intermediate
elevation river terraces and alluvial fans, which form the proposed
area's tabletop or ``mesa,'' the elevation of which gently rises from
approximately 35 feet in the west to 135 feet in the east.
The proposed Alta Mesa area's northern boundary coincides with the
established Lodi viticultural area's boundary at Sheldon Road in
Sacramento County. According to the petition, eroded terrain and a
change in soil types mark the proposed area's southern boundary at the
Dry Creek estuary. Changes in elevation from Alta Mesa's tabletop
landform, the petition explains, mark the proposed area's eastern and
western boundary lines. Also, the petition notes, the proposed area's
western boundary marks a transition to the warmer climate of the
proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area. In addition, the proposed
Alta Mesa area is bordered on the east by the proposed Sloughhouse and
Borden Ranch viticultural areas, and, to the south, by the proposed
Jahant area.
Distinguishing Features
Topography
The proposed Alta Mesa viticultural area's tabletop or mesa-like
landform is one of the area's most distinctive and unifying features,
the petition states. The proposed Alta Mesa area sits on intermediate
elevation river terraces and alluvial fans, and, despite some
depressions and mounds, the area has a generally flat surface. This
tabletop landform peaks at 138 feet in its northeast corner and
gradually declines to 35 feet along its western side. To the east of
the proposed Alta Mesa area, the Sierra Range foothills begin to rise
within the proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area. To the proposed Alta
Mesa area's immediate west, the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural
area has lower elevations that almost dip to mean sea level. Deer Creek
and the lower course of the Cosumnes River run parallel and southwest
through the proposed area.
Soils
The San Joaquin soil series, which covers about 90 percent of the
Alta Mesa region, is also a distinctive feature of the proposed
viticultural area, the petition states. The petition explains that this
soil series consists of dense, heavy clay that limits rooting depth and
the need for irrigation. Classified as Abruptic Durixeralfs, the San
Joaquin soils have high percentages of clay and gravel, and intensive
reddening and cementation caused by silica, clay, and iron. This soil
series has intermediate-age parent materials, 12,000 to 45,000 years
old, from stage 2 of the late Pleistocene glacial age, making these
some of the oldest soils within the established Lodi viticultural area,
according to the petition.
The San Joaquin soil series, the petition emphasizes, creates a
distinctive and beneficial viticultural environment in the proposed
Alta Mesa viticultural area. The Storie Index, which rates soils from 0
to 100 points for potential agricultural use (100 being most suitable),
places the Alta Mesa soils between 25 and 40 points of suitability.
Climate
The petition uses data from the Lodi, Sacramento, Folsom, and Camp
Pardee weather stations, which are located close to the proposed Alta
Mesa viticultural area. Climatically, the petition states, the proposed
Alta Mesa area is a transitional region that is warmer than the other
proposed viticultural areas within the existing Lodi viticultural area,
except for Sloughhouse, which is further inland to the east of the
proposed Alta Mesa area. The petition states that the proposed Alta
Mesa area's mean annual temperature is 60.5 degrees Fahrenheit. The
average growing season degree-day total \*\ for the proposed Alta Mesa
viticultural area, according to the petition, is more than 100 degree
days over that of the cooler, proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area
to its west and the proposed Borden Ranch and Clements Hills
viticultural areas to
[[Page 47743]]
its east and southeast. Also, the petition continues, the warmer Alta
Mesa area is more than 200 degree days higher than the proposed Jahant
and Mokelumne River viticultural areas to its south, which are closer
to the Sacramento Delta's cooling winds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\*\ During the growing season, one degree day accumulates for
each degree Fahrenheit that a day's average temperature is above 50
degrees, which is the minimum temperature required for grapevine
growth. See ``General Viticulture,'' by Albert J. Winkler,
University of California Press, 1974.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The sea breeze from the Pacific Ocean that funnels through the
Carquinez Straits and the Sacramento Delta, the petition explains,
cools the overall Lodi area. However, this natural air conditioning
gradually decreases in intensity and disperses as it flows inland from
west to east. As measured across the northern portion of the existing
Lodi viticultural area from west to east, these marine winds are
strongest in the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area, less
intense in the proposed Alta Mesa area, and weakest in the proposed
Sloughhouse area.
Winter fog is also common in the proposed Alta Mesa viticultural
area, the petition explains, due to seasonal standing water and cold-
air drainage from the foothills to the east. This fog slightly
decreases the Alta Mesa area's growing season degree-day total,
according to the petition, by limiting the springtime heating of the
soil and vines. In addition, the petition notes, the proposed Alta Mesa
viticultural area's elevation provides a buffer between this fog from
the west and the proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area to the east.
The average annual rain total in the proposed Alta Mesa
viticultural area, according to petition evidence, is 18.5 inches. This
amount, the petition notes, is less than the 23-inch annual average in
Sloughhouse to the east and more than the 14 to 17.5-inch average in
regions to Alta Mesa's immediate south.
Borden Ranch
The proposed Borden Ranch viticultural area is located in southern
Sacramento and northern San Joaquin Counties in the east-central
portion of the established Lodi viticultural area, approximately 27
miles southeast of the city of Sacramento and 13 miles north of the
city of Lodi. Covering 70,000 acres, the petition notes that
approximately 11,000 acres within the proposed Borden Ranch area are
planted to grapes. Located between the Sierra Foothills to the east and
the San Joaquin Valley to the west, the proposed area has a distinctive
terrain of old alluvial fans, river terraces and plains, and high
elevations, according to the LAVA Steering Committee petition.
Below, we summarize the evidence presented in the Borden Ranch
petition.
Name Evidence
In 1864, Ivey Lewis Borden established the Borden Ranch in this
area, and local residents have used the name ever since, according to
the petition. For example, the petition notes an August 16, 1929,
Stockton Daily Evening Record article reporting on a barn fire on the
Borden Ranch that killed a famous horse. More recently, the Borden
Ranch name appeared in a court case and related news media stories
involving a developer who sued the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers over
wetlands issues, and the petition included a January 6, 2003,
Sacramento Business Journal article on the case.
The petition states that since the 1970s, when the Burton and
Dedomenico families began the first major grape plantings within the
proposed area, local residents have also come to know Borden Ranch for
its grape growing. Since that time, the petition continues, Sutter
Home, Mondavi, and Delicato have also planted vineyards in the proposed
area. The petition also claims that between 1995 and 1996, the single
largest vineyard expansion in California history occurred in this area.
In addition, the petition includes articles from the April 8, 2003,
Stockton Record and the April 18, 2003, Modesto Bee that discuss recent
vineyard development around Clay Station. Named for a popular
stagecoach stop from the California Gold Rush days and located on the
historic Borden Ranch, Clay Station is noted for its rich reddish clay
soils and large stones, which provide for well-drained soil for grape
growing, according to the Stockton Record article.
The petition also included statements from local residents
regarding the use of the Borden Ranch name. For example, Jeff Sparrowk,
a longtime Clements-area rancher, notes that the Borden Ranch is well
known for its quality grazing land and vineyards. Robert Disch, a
Borden Ranch-area farmer, states that Borden Ranch has become well
known since vineyard development began there in the 1970s. He adds,
``We are happy to see the notoriety of this region increasing and can
declare that the Borden Ranch has a well-known history in our
community.''
Wine industry publications have also taken notice of the Borden
Ranch area, according to several articles supplied with the petition.
An article titled ``Lodi & the Sacramento Valley Vintage 2000'' from
the Wine Institute's ``Harvest 2000'' publication comments on the
``enormous quality potential'' of newer grape growing areas ``such as
Borden Ranch.'' The Spring 2002 edition of the ``V&E Trellis Wire,'' a
publication of the Department of Viticultural and Enology at the
University of California-Davis, includes an article about a student
field trip to the Lodi-Woodbridge wine region. The article describes
the students' visit to the Borden Ranch, which it characterized as a
4,000-acre vineyard region.
Boundary Evidence
The proposed Borden Ranch viticultural area lies between the Sierra
Range foothills to the east and the San Joaquin Valley to the west. The
proposed area's northern and southern boundaries are based on two
generally parallel streams--the Laguna, a tributary of the Cosumnes
River, in the north, and Dry Creek, a tributary of the Mokelumne River,
in the south. Both flow northeast to southwest from the Sierra
Foothills to the San Joaquin Valley.
The stream deposits from the Laguna and Dry Creek are the
distinguishing and unifying feature of the proposed Borden Ranch
viticultural area, according to the petition. The proposed area's
predominant geographical features are the high elevation, older river
terraces and hills located within the watersheds of the Laguna and Dry
Creek. These deposits and river terraces, the petition explains, extend
from the Laguna in the north to near Liberty Road at the area's
proposed southern boundary near Dry Creek. As a result, the proposed
Borden Ranch area's northern boundary follows the path of the Laguna,
while Dry Creek runs slightly north of the proposed area's southern
boundary. The petition uses roads to mark the proposed area's eastern
and western boundaries.
Distinguishing Features
Topography
As explained in the petition, the proposed Borden Ranch
viticultural area has distinctive terrain due to its location between
the Laguna and Dry Creek streams and its location at the base of the
Sierra Foothills. The river terraces and stream deposits left by the
Laguna and Dry Creek throughout the proposed Borden Ranch area are its
distinguishing and unifying feature, according to the petition. The
petition notes that the proposed area's lower, western elevations also
have prairie mounds and vernal pools along these river terraces. Hills
and ridges, which are the eroded remnants of very old river deposits,
are found near the Sierra Foothills in the proposed area's higher
eastern elevations. In addition, the petition states, the oldest
alluvial fans in
[[Page 47744]]
Sacramento and San Joaquin Counties are found in the eastern portion of
the proposed area close to the Sierras.
The proposed Borden Ranch viticultural area inclines upward toward
the Sierra Range, from 73 feet in elevation along its western boundary
to 520 feet along its eastern border, a rise of 447 feet. While these
elevations and rise are similar to the proposed Sloughhouse
viticultural area to the north of the Borden Ranch area, the proposed
Alta Mesa and Jahant areas to the west of Borden Ranch have peak
elevations of only 137 feet and 105 feet, respectively. The existing
Lodi viticultural area's eastern boundary also marks the eastern limit
of the proposed Borden Ranch area--beyond which lies the higher
elevations and more mountainous terrain of the Sierra Foothills.
Soils
The terrain within the proposed Borden Ranch viticultural area
exceeds 700,000 years in age, and is distinctively older than the
terrain found in the other six proposed Lodi viticultural areas,
according to the petition. In addition, the petition notes, the oldest
valley soils in the Lodi region are found on the tops of the terraces
above the streams in the proposed Borden Ranch area. These old
Durixeralfs soils, the petition states, include the Redding,
Hicksville, Corning, and Yellowlark soil series.
In contrast, the petition states that the surface terrain in the
proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area to the north of the Borden Ranch
area and in the proposed Clements Hills viticultural area to its south
is from 125,000 and 250,000 years old, respectively, to 700,000 years
old. Additionally, the proposed Borden Ranch viticultural area's soils
contain a large percentage of surface and below ground rock cobble, or
stones, a feature unique to this area, according to the petition.
Climate
The petition incorporates data from the Lodi, Sacramento, Folsom,
Camp Pardee, and Stockton weather stations, which are located near the
proposed Borden Ranch viticultural area. The proposed Borden Ranch
area, the petition notes, has a greater diversity of topographic-
climatic vineyard sites than any of the other six areas proposed for
establishment within the existing Lodi viticultural area. As the
petition explains, vineyards within the proposed Borden Ranch area are
found on hilltops or slopes, and in flat valley floors, facing
different compass directions. These topographic variables, the petition
states, are responsible for differences of sun, temperature, soil,
water, and windiness in the vineyards.
The proposed Borden Ranch area, according to the petition, is
windier, warmer, and wetter, than the lowland regions to its west. The
combination of cooling Sacramento Delta breezes from the west and cold
air drainage from the Sierra Foothills to the east, the petition
explains, generates high wind intensity and duration in the proposed
Borden Ranch area. The petition notes that this windswept environment,
in conjunction with the area's hills and stony soils, creates high
water evaporation conditions in the vineyards that lessen the vigor of
the grapevine growth.
While the Borden Ranch area's growing season degree day total is
similar to that of the other six proposed Lodi viticultural areas, its
annual mean temperature of 60.4 degrees Fahrenheit is slightly warmer
than the other six proposed areas, with the exception of the
Sloughhouse area to its north. Annual rainfall in the Borden Ranch area
is 20 inches, which is less than the 23 inches of the Sloughhouse area
to the north, the petition states, with the other proposed Lodi
viticultural areas averaging as low as 14 inches of annual rainfall.
Clements Hills
Located in northern San Joaquin County, the proposed Clements Hills
viticultural area occupies much of the southeastern portion of the
established Lodi viticultural area, approximately 41 miles southeast of
Sacramento and 13 miles east of the city of Lodi. Covering 85,400
acres, of which approximately 16,000 acres are planted to grapes, the
LAVA Steering Committee petition states that the proposed Clements
Hills viticultural area is a hilly transitional region between the low,
flat San Joaquin Valley floor to the west and the progressively higher
Sierra Foothills to the east. The petition adds that the proposed
area's high elevation river terraces and rounded hilltops distinguish
it from surrounding grape-growing regions.
Below, we summarize the evidence presented in the Clements Hills
petition.
Name Evidence
The small town of Clements is located in the northern portion of
the proposed Clements Hills viticultural area and is shown on the USGS
Clements map and on California highway maps. According to the petition,
Thomas Clements, who had settled in the region in 1857, donated 25
acres of land in 1882 to develop the town as a stop on the San Joaquin
and Sierra Nevada Railroad. Named for its benefactor, the town served
as a shipping point for the region's grain, wool, hops, fruit, and
other agricultural commodities.
The proposed ``Clements Hills'' viticultural area name combines the
town's name with a reference to the proposed area's hilly terrain.
Local residents, realtors, and members of the wine industry, the
petition states, commonly use the Clements Hills name to refer to the
land within the proposed area's boundaries. For example, realtor Tad
Platt states that while marketing materials formerly referred to the
``rolling hills of Clement,'' the area has become better known simply
as ``Clements Hills'' in recent years. Farmer Wesley Breitchenbucher
and businessman Jeff Myers, whose families have lived in the Clements
area for generations, also indicate that the proposed area is known as
Clements Hills, according to the petition. The petition quotes Mr.
Myers as stating that ``the red, shallow soils of the Clements Hills''
has attracted many vineyards and ranchette developments in the past
decade. In addition, the petition notes the use of the Clements Hills
name on the label of Vino Con Brio's 2001 Sangiovese wine.
Boundary Evidence
The high elevation river terraces and hills formed by the Mokelumne
River, along with the region's older soils, distinguish the proposed
Clements Hills area from surrounding areas, according to the petition.
The Clements Hills area's proposed northern boundary, along Liberty
Road, approximates the northern edge of the higher and older Mokelumne
River terraces, the petition explains. The petition adds that, north of
the proposed boundary, elevations decrease in the proposed Borden Ranch
viticultural area due to the more eroded land found in the vicinity of
Dry Creek.
The Clements Hills proposed eastern boundary follows the San
Joaquin County line, separating the proposed area from the more
mountainous Amador, Calaveras, and Stanislaus Counties. These county
lines, according to the petition, mark the transition from the rolling
hills of the Clements Hills region to the Sierra Foothills more
mountainous environment.
The Clements Hills proposed southern boundary line follows the
Calaveras River as it meanders west from the Sierra Foothills to the
San Joaquin Valley. To the north of the Calaveras River, within the
proposed area's boundaries, the terrain is made up primarily of hills
from older Mokelumne River deposits, the petition explains. Also, the
petition states, the Calaveras River's alluvial terrace and
[[Page 47745]]
fan deposits become progressively younger as one moves south from the
proposed area's southern boundary.
The Clements Hills proposed western boundary is along Jack Tone and
Elliott roads. To the east of these roads within the proposed area, the
petition explains, the terrain consists primarily of hilly deposits
from the older alluvial terraces and fans. The petition adds that to
the west of Jack Tone and Elliott roads beyond the Clements Hills area,
the hilly terrain gives way to younger, sandier, and lower alluvial fan
formations and eventually the flat San Joaquin valley floor.
Distinguishing Features
Topography
The proposed Clements Hills viticultural area is located between
the flat, low elevations of the San Joaquin Valley floor to its west
and the higher Sierra Foothills elevations to its east, according to
the petition. Elevations within the proposed boundary area increase
from a low of 90 feet on its western, San Joaquin Valley side to
greater than 400 feet high at its eastern boundary line, according to
the provided USGS maps. The petition also notes that the hilltops
within the Clements Hills proposed viticultural area are distinctively
convex and rounded. The Clements Hills, the petition states, contrast
with the flat valley terrain to the west, the flat hilltops of the
proposed Borden Ranch viticultural area to the north, and the more
mountainous environment of the Sierras. Through time and weather, the
petition adds, the bluffs and terraces of the Mokelumne River have
become smooth topped, rolling hills that extend toward the proposed
Clements Hills area's southern boundary at the Calaveras River.
Soils
The petition explains that the soils found within the proposed
Clements Hills proposed viticultural area are old and primarily
classified as Haploxerailfs, Durixeralfs, and Palexeralfs. These brown,
red and yellow loams, clay loams, and clays, the petition states,
principally belong to the Redding, Cometa, Yellowlark, and Montpellier
soil series. Also, the petition notes, these low vigor soils have
higher water holding capacities than the stony soils to the north in
the proposed Borden Ranch viticultural area, but less than the loamy
soils to the west in the proposed Mokelumne River area. Using a scale
of 0 to 100, with 0 most unsuitable for agriculture and 100 most
suitable, the Storie Index rates the soils in the proposed Clements
Hills viticultural area at between 15 and 30, according to the
petition.
Climate
Using data from the Lodi, Sacramento, Folsom, Stockton, and Camp
Pardee weather stations, which are located close to the proposed
Clements Hills viticultural area, the petition states that the proposed
Clements Hills viticultural area is warmer and wetter than the regions
to its west. While the mean annual temperature of the proposed Clements
Hills viticultural area is 60.5 degrees Fahrenheit, which is similar to
the other proposed Lodi viticultural areas, the Clements Hills area
growing season annual degree-day total is approximately 100 degree days
more than the proposed Mokelumne River and Jahant viticultural areas to
the west, according to the petition.
The petition notes that fog is less frequent in the proposed
Clements Hills viticultural area than in lower elevation, San Joaquin
valley floor areas to its west and, therefore, the proposed area
receives more hours of warming sunshine. Reduced winds also help warm
the proposed Clements Hills area, according the petition. Although the
proposed area receives consistent Sacramento Delta breezes, the hilly
terrain of the proposed Clements Hills area, the petition notes,
reduces the marine wind speed and movement across the proposed area.
Air drainage from the higher slopes to the east, the petition adds,
reduces frost occurrences in the proposed viticultural area as well.
Rainfall in the proposed Clements Hills viticultural area averages
21 to 22 inches annually, according to the petition, which is more than
the lower elevation Jahant and Mokelumne River areas to its west and
the Borden Ranch area to its north receive. The petition explains that
the proposed Clements Hills area's hilly topography and its location
just west of the Sierra Mountains bring more rain to the area since
these higher elevations cause moisture-laden Pacific air to rise,
forcing the air's moisture to condense and fall to the ground.
Cosumnes River
The proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area is in the
northwestern portion of the existing Lodi viticultural area,
approximately 20 miles south of the city of Sacramento and 14 miles
north of the city of Lodi. Approximately 3,000 acres of the 54,700
acres within the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area are
currently planted to grapes, according to the petition. The climate of
the proposed viticultural area, most notably a relatively cool and
windy growing season, as well as its young, alluvial soils and low-
elevation terrain distinguish the proposed area from surrounding areas,
according to the petition.
Below, we summarize the evidence presented in the Cosumnes River
petition.
Name Evidence
The May 2001 California State Automobile Association ``Central
California'' map shows the Cosumnes River from its headwaters in the
Sierra Range to its confluence with the Mokelumne River between Walnut
Grove and Thornton, California. The lower portion of the river flows
through the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area. The USGS
quadrangle maps for Bruceville, Elk Grove, and Galt, California, which
are used to define portions of the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural
area boundary, identify the Cosumnes River and show its northeast-to-
southwest path through the proposed area. The LAVA Committee considered
using the ``Upper Cosumnes'' and ``Lower Cosumnes'' names for the
proposed ``Sloughhouse'' and ``Cosumnes River'' viticultural areas,
respectively, but believes the proposed name choices are more
appropriate.
As noted in the petition, the Cosumnes River name is associated
with other places within the proposed viticultural area. For example,
the Cosumnes River Preserve, located between Interstate Highways 5 and
State Route 99 in southern Sacramento County, is also prominently shown
on the California State Automobile Association's Central California
map. The petition explains that this Nature Conservancy preserve, a
1,450-acre protected natural area and wildlife habitat, is in the heart
of the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area. Also, Cosumnes River
College is located in the suburbs of Sacramento, just north of the
proposed area's northern boundary.
Historically, the petition explains, the name ``Cosumnes'' comes
from the Native American Miwok people's term for ``salmon people.'' The
petition adds that an alternative Miwok translation is ``the place of
the koso berry.'' John Sutter, an early settler, provides an 1841
written reference to the term ``Cosumnes River,'' the petition states,
and 1845 and 1848 maps by John Fremont label this waterway as the
``Cosumnes River.'' The March 1, 1851, edition of the Stockton Times,
in describing the region, states: ``Some of the earlier settlements
made in this country were along the Cosumnes''.
[[Page 47746]]
Boundary Evidence
The existing Lodi viticultural area boundary marks the limits of
the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area to the north and west. To
the east, the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area shares a
boundary with the proposed Alta Mesa viticultural area, and, to the
south, with the proposed Jahant and Mokelumne River viticultural areas.
A portion of the Mokelumne River marks the proposed area's southern
boundary line.
The proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area lies south of the
city of Sacramento and borders the west side of the town of Galt. The
proposed area primarily produces white wine grape varietals, as
compared to red grape varietals in areas to the east and a mixture of
red and white grape varietals in areas to the south.
Distinguishing Features
The relatively cool and windy growing season of the proposed
Cosumnes River viticultural area, its young, alluvial soils, and its
low-elevation terrain distinguish the proposed area from surrounding
areas, according to the petition.
Topography
The petition explains that the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural
area topography includes wetlands, natural and artificial levees,
sloughs, streams, and the Cosumnes River. In addition, the Mokelumne
River marks a portion of the area's southern boundary. A large alluvial
fan crosses the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area and slopes
towards its southwest corner.
The low elevations found in the proposed Cosumnes River
viticultural area distinguish it from the surrounding, higher-elevation
areas, the petition states. At its southwestern corner, where the
Cosumnes River joins the Mokelumne River, the elevation of the proposed
Cosumnes River viticultural area dips to almost sea level. Elevations
within the proposed area gradually rise to a high point of 48 feet at
its southeast corner, according to the provided UGSS maps. In contrast,
the petition notes, the proposed Alta Mesa viticultural area, to the
east of the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area, has elevations
to 138 feet. To the south, the proposed Jahant viticultural area rises
to 80 feet in elevation, and the proposed Mokelumne River viticultural
area rises to 85 feet, according to the petition.
Soils
The proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area, the petition
explains, is dominated by young, alluvial soils that distinguish it
from the surrounding areas. The petition notes that 60 percent of the
agricultural land within the proposed area is covered by a series of
younger alluvial and organic soils, Xerothents and Histosols. These
younger soils, the petition continues, predominate in the lower areas,
including the floodplains, sloughs, and wetlands, and around the
Cosumnes River and its tributaries along the western side of the
proposed viticultural area. The intermediate-age, deep reddish,
gravelly clay loam soils of the San Joaquin series cover the remaining
40 percent of the agricultural land within the proposed Cosumnes River
viticultural area, according to the petition. These soils, classified
as Abruptic Durixeralfs, have good water-holding capacity and moderate
fertility.
To the east of the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area, the
proposed Alta Mesa viticultural area soils are of intermediate age, and
about 90 percent of its soils are from the San Joaquin series,
according to the petition. To the south, the proposed Jahant and
Mokelumne River viticultural areas have a combination of young and
intermediate in age soils. According to the petition, the Storie Index,
which rates soils from 0 to 100 points for potential agricultural use,
places the Cosumnes River soils at between 24 and 40 points for
suitability.
Climate
The petition provides statistics and data from the Lodi,
Sacramento, and Folsom weather stations, which are close to the
proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area. Overall, according to the
petition, the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area has a cool and
breezy climate.
The proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area has a mean annual
growing season temperature of approximately 60 degrees Fahrenheit and
intermediate level winds, the petition explains. The surrounding areas
to the north and east are warmer and have less wind than the proposed
Cosumnes River viticultural area, according to the petition. Also, to
the south, the proposed Jahant and Mokelumne River viticultural areas
are cooler and have stronger marine winds. The petition adds that the
Pacific Ocean's cooling breezes funnel eastward through San Francisco's
Golden Gate, the Carquinez Strait, and the Sacramento Delta to reach
the Lodi area. These marine breezes cool the Lodi area's lower
elevations, including the Cosumnes River floodplain and the areas to
the river's south. The intensity and effect of these cooling winds,
according to the petition, dissipate as they continue eastward over the
proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area to the proposed Alta Mesa and
Sloughhouse viticultural areas.
The petition states that maritime and inland fog is persistent in
the low elevations of the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area.
This fog cools the proposed viticultural area more than the surrounding
areas, which are less influenced by the maritime winds. The annual
precipitation within the proposed Cosumnes area is 17.4 inches,
according to the petition, which is more than the low elevation areas
to its immediate south, but less than the high elevation regions to the
north and east of the proposed viticultural area's boundaries.
Jahant
The proposed Jahant viticultural area is located in the center of
the existing Lodi viticultural area, about 29 miles south of the city
of Sacramento and 7 miles north of the city of Lodi. Currently,
approximately 8,000 acres of the 28,000 acres within the proposed
Jahant viticultural area are planted to grapes, according to the
petition. The pink Jahant loam soil found in the proposed viticultural
area is its most distinguishing characteristic, according to the
petition, giving the Jahant area a unique grape-growing environment.
Also, the petition notes that the proposed Jahant viticultural area's
climate is cooler, dryer, and windier than most of the other proposed
viticultural areas discussed in this notice. The petition adds that the
terrain within the proposed Jahant viticultural area is noted for its
river terraces and old floodplain deposits.
Below, we summarize the evidence presented in the Jahant petition.
Name Evidence
The ``Jahant'' name is associated with the central portion of the
established Lodi viticultural area in southern Sacramento and northern
San Joaquin Counties, according to the petition. The name comes from
Peter Jahant and several of his brothers, all 1850s settlers to the
area, the petition states. The Jahant family settled and successfully
farmed in the Acampo area of the Lodi region, and, in 1912, Peter
Jahant's son Charles planted 130 acres to grapes on the original family
farm and on additional purchased land.
Jahant Slough and Jahant Road, a light-duty, east-west road, are
shown on the Lodi North and Lockeford USGS maps, in the approximate
center of the proposed Jahant viticultural area. Also, Jahant Road is
shown in sections B-4,
[[Page 47747]]
B-5, C-5, and C-6 of the Gold Country map, published in April 2002 by
the California State Automobile Association. The Jahant Equestrian
Center is on Jahant Road, and some area vineyards use Jahant in their
names, according to the petition.
Boundary Evidence
The petition states that the unique pink Rocklin-Jahant loam soils
found within the proposed Jahant viticultural area and the deep
dissections through river deposits left by flooding within the past
20,000 years distinguish the proposed Jahant area from the surrounding
proposed viticultural areas. To the south, the proposed Mokelumne River
viticultural area has predominantly young, light colored sandy soils,
the petition notes, while to the north, the proposed Alta Mesa
viticultural area has predominantly intermediate age red soils. The
petition states that the boundaries of the proposed Jahant viticultural
area encompass the extent of the Jahant soils.
The petition also explains that dissected river terraces and old
floodplain deposits, located between Dry Creek and the Mokelumne River,
distinguish the proposed Jahant area from the surrounding areas. Dry
Creek is part of the northern boundary of the proposed Jahant
viticultural area, and the creek flows through its northwest section.
The Mokelumne River forms the western boundary of the proposed Jahant
area, close to where it joins with the Cosumnes River, according to the
provided USGS maps.
Distinguishing Features
Topography
Elevations in the proposed Jahant viticultural area vary from about
10 feet to 100 feet, according to USGS maps of the area. Also, these
elevations rise from the west to the east, increasing toward the Sierra
Range. The proposed viticultural area, the petition explains, is dotted
with small lakes, sloughs, rivers on the north and west sides, the
larger Tracy Lake to the east, and a gas field in the southeast corner.
The contours of the area, predominantly river terraces and old, eroded
floodplain deposits, the petition continues, have developed from the
actions of Dry Creek and the Mokelumne River.
Soils
The proposed Jahant viticultural area, located primarily between
Dry Creek and the Mokelumne River, has distinctive pink Rocklin-Jahant
soils that are principally sandy loams and sandy clay loams with
massive structure, thickness, and hardened depth, the petition
explains. The soils are classified as Mollic Pelexeralfs. These old
soils, the petition continues, have younger sandy surfaces and are
generally different in structure, thickness, and depth from the San
Joaquin deep reddish, gravelly clay loam soils found north of the
proposed Jahant viticultural area. To the south, the petition states,
the light sandy loam Tokay and Acampo soils are young, deep and well
drained, tend to be granular and crumbly, and of a fine texture without
gravel, in contrast to the Jahant soils.
Climate
The petition provides statistics and data from the Lodi,
Sacramento, Folsom, Camp Pardee, and Stockton weather stations, which
are close to the proposed Cosumnes River viticultural area. The
proposed Jahant viticultural area, the petition comments, has cool
climatic characteristics similar to those of the proposed Mokelumne
River viticultural area to the south. Both regions, according to the
petition, receive the Pacific marine breezes that funnel east from the
San Francisco Golden Gate, through the Carquinez Straights, the
Sacramento Delta, and into the Lodi area. The petition also notes the
cooling effect of persistent valley and coastal fog within the proposed
boundaries.
The winds in the proposed Jahant viticultural area are of high
intensity and prolonged duration, similar to those of the proposed
Mokelumne River viticultural area to the south, the petition states. In
contrast, to the north and northeast of the proposed Jahant area, the
proposed Alta Mesa and Sloughhouse viticultural areas have less wind
intensity and warmer temperatures, according to the petition.
The mean annual temperature of the proposed Jahant viticultural
area is 60.1 degrees Fahrenheit, which is lower than the majority of
other proposed viticultural areas discussed in this notice, according
to the petition. Also, the growing season degree-day annual totals are
between 100 and 400 degree days lower than other parts of the Lodi
region, except for the proposed Mokelumne River viticultural area to
the immediate south. Finally, the Jahant area's annual rainfall is 18.0
inches, which is less than rainfall totals in the other areas of the
Lodi region with the exception of proposed Mokelumne River viticultural
area.
Mokelumne River
The proposed Mokelumne River viticultural area is in northern San
Joaquin County in the southwestern portion of the existing Lodi
viticultural area. According to the petition, the proposed Mokelumne
River viticultural area covers 85,700 acres, of which approximately
42,000 acres are vineyards. The young alluvial fan created by the
Mokelumne River distinguishes the proposed Mokelumne River viticultural
area from the surrounding areas, the petition states. In addition, the
distinctively breezy climate of this proposed viticultural area is the
coolest within the original Lodi viticultural area, according to the
petition.
Below, we summarize the evidence presented in the Mokelumne River
petition.
Name Evidence
Historically, the ``Mokelumne'' name is derived from the Miwok
Indians and has been translated as ``the place of the fish net,''
according to the petition. Known earlier as the Rio Mokellemos, the
present spelling of Mokelumne was set in 1848 by John C. Fremont, as
documented in the ``California Place Names,'' by Erwin Gudde, published
in 1960 by the University of California Press.
The Mokelumne River, which flows west from the Sierras into the San
Joaquin Valley, is shown on a number of USGS maps, including the
Lockeford, Lodi North, Bruceville, Thornton, Clements, and Wallace
maps. Other maps also show the river, including the Gold Country map
published by the California State Automobile Association in April 2002.
Boundary Evidence
The petition explains that the ``classic, young'' alluvial fan of
the Mokelumne River extends east-to-west through the proposed Mokelumne
River viticultural area. Given its distinctive geology and topography,
the river's alluvial fan contrasts with the geology and topography of
the other proposed viticultural areas discussed in this notice and the
areas beyond. According to the petition, east of Jack Tone Road, beyond
the proposed Mokelumne River viticultural area boundary line, are the
older terrace deposits of the proposed Clements Hills viticultural
area, while south of the proposed boundary, toward Linden and
Farmington, the coarse deposits of the Calaveras River alluvial fan
contrast with the sandy loam of the proposed Mokelumne River
viticultural area. To the west of Interstate 5, and beyond the original
Lodi viticultural area western boundary line, very young organic and
inorganic soils dominate the Sacramento Delta region, according
[[Page 47748]]
to the petition. To the north of the proposed Mokelumne River area
boundary line are the older river deposits that distinguish the Jahant
region.
Distinguishing Features
Topography
The Mokelumne River meanders through the northern portion of the
proposed Mokelumne River viticultural area, while creeks, sloughs, a
canal, and an aqueduct run through its interior. Also, the city of Lodi
is located on the south bank of the Mokelumne River in the approximate
center of the proposed viticultural area.
The topography of the proposed Mokelumne River viticultural area is
dominated by a relatively young alluvial fan over an intermediate age
fan, according to the petition. To the east, the fan joins with the
older Mokelumne River terrace deposits along Jack Tone Road, which
serves as part of the boundary line for proposed viticultural area, the
petition notes. The Mokelumne River alluvial fan extends from the
higher eastern elevations of the Clements region to the lower
elevations along Interstate 5 and Eight Mile Road to the southwest,
according to the provided USGS maps and the petition. The USGS maps of
the proposed Mokelumne River viticultural area show elevations sloping
downward to the west from a high of 100 feet at the northeast corner of
the proposed area to a low of 5 feet at its southwest corner.
Soils
The petition explains that sandy loam Tokay and Acampo soils
dominate the proposed Mokelumne River viticultural area. These soils
are young, deep and drain well, according to the petition. Also, the
soils tend to be granular and crumbly, of a fine texture and without
gravel. The sandy loams in the region, the petition describes, are
generally between 6 and 12 feet in depth with low moisture holding
capacity, especially in the western portion of the proposed area.
Climate
The petition uses climate statistics and data from the Lodi weather
station, which is located near the proposed Mokelumne River
viticultural area. The climate of the proposed Mokelumne River
viticultural area is the coolest within the existing Lodi viticultural
area, the petition explains. The proposed Mokelumne River viticultural
area, the petition continues, is the closest of the seven proposed Lodi
viticultural areas to the Carquinez Straights that funnel Pacific Ocean
breezes eastward from the Golden Gate, through the Sacramento Delta, to
the Lodi area.
The winds in the proposed Mokelumne River viticultural area are of
high intensity and prolonged duration, blowing more than 70 percent of
the time, the petition states. The winds lose little intensity as they
cross the low elevations and flat terrain within the proposed
boundaries, according to the petition.
The mean annual temperature within the proposed Mokelumne
viticultural area is 60.0 degrees Fahrenheit, which is lower than the
other proposed viticultural areas discussed in this notice, according
to the petition. Also, the growing season degree-day annual totals are
between 50 and 450 degree days lower than those found in the other six
proposed Lodi viticultural areas. Rainfall within the proposed
Mokelumne River viticultural area is 17.57 inches, which is the lowest
of the seven proposed viticultural areas discussed in this notice, the
petition states.
Sloughhouse
The proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area is located in southern
Sacramento County, approximately 21 miles southeast of the city of
Sacramento and 22 miles north of the city of Lodi. Located in the
northeastern portion of the existing Lodi viticultural area,
approximately 7,000 acres within the 78,800-acre proposed Sloughhouse
viticultural area are currently planted to grapes, according to the
petition.
The petition states that warmer temperatures, more rain, less fog,
higher elevations, and older soils distinguish the proposed Sloughhouse
viticultural area from the other proposed viticultural areas discussed
in this notice. The proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area, which is
also adjacent to the established Sierra Foothills viticultural area (27
CFR 9.120), has rolling plains and hilly terrain that transitions to
the Sierra Foothills further east, according to the petition.
Below, we summarize the evidence presented in the Sloughhouse
petition.
Name Evidence
The Sacramento Bee newspaper published an article on January 19,
1998, detailing the history of the Sloughhouse region. In the 1850's
the Sloughhouse Inn, which gave the region its name, was a popular
stagecoach stop. According to the article, the building, rebuilt
several times after fires, is a registered California historical
landmark. Today, the Sloughhouse Inn is a restaurant. Modern usage of
the Sloughhouse name, according to petition evidence, is also seen in
the names of the Sloughhouse Resource Conservation District, the
Sloughhouse Fire Protection District, and the Sloughhouse Area
Genealogical Society.
The USGS Geographic Names Information System (GNIS) database lists
``Sloughhouse'' as a populated place in Sacramento County, California.
The USGS Sloughhouse quadrangle map shows the hamlet of Sloughhouse
along State Road 16 on the Township 7 and 8 North line, between Ranges
6 and 7 East. Sloughhouse Road, a secondary road, is shown on the USGS
Elk Grove and Sloughhouse maps within the proposed viticultural area
boundary lines.
Boundary Evidence
Warmer temperatures, less intense winds, more rainfall, and greater
climatic variations distinguish the proposed Sloughhouse viticultural
area from the surrounding areas within the Lodi region according to the
petition. It adds that elevations within the proposed Sloughhouse
viticultural area are generally higher and the soils older than the
other surrounding proposed viticultural areas. The distinguishing
Sloughhouse terrain and climatic characteristics, the petition
explains, make this proposed viticultural area significantly different
from the surrounding areas. Red varietals, including Cabernet
Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot, and Zinfandel, are popular in the
Sloughhouse area as they can withstand drought and other climatic
variations, the petition states.
The proposed Sloughhouse area's outer boundaries follow a portion
of the existing Lodi viticultural area northern and eastern boundary
lines, and the proposed area abuts the established Sierra Foothills
viticultural area western boundary line. The petition explains that the
shared Lodi and Sierra Foothills viticultural areas boundary line,
which coincides with the Amador County line, is the logical division
between the valley and mountain environments.
Distinguishing Features
Topography
The proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area, the petition states,
has the most diverse terrain of the seven proposed viticultural areas
discussed in this notice. Gently rolling hills, flat creek and river
valleys, plains, and an alluvial fan characterize the proposed
viticultural area, according to the petition.
[[Page 47749]]
The proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area ranges in elevation from
a low of 73 feet in its southwest region to a high of 590 feet in its
northeast region, according to the provided USGS maps. The northeast
region of Sloughhouse, which has the highest elevations in the proposed
area, slopes upward and becomes the bedrock-based foothills of the
Sierra Range, the petition notes. These higher elevations are similar
to Borden Ranch to the south, but contrast with the proposed Alta Mesa
viticultural area to the west with its lower elevations of between 35
and 138 feet.
Three significant waterways, the Cosumnes River and its Deer Creek
and Laguna tributaries flow west from the Sierra Foothills through the
proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area. Deer Creek constitutes the
northeastern boundary line of the proposed viticultural area, as noted
in the petition's boundary description. Deer Creek, according to USGS
maps, then meanders southwesterly through the interior of the proposed
Sloughhouse area. The Cosumnes River runs roughly parallel to Deer
Creek and through the approximate middle of the proposed Sloughhouse
viticultural area. Deer Creek eventually joins the Cosumnes River to
the west of the proposed viticultural area. The Laguna forms the south
boundary line for the proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area and joins
the Cosumnes River and Deer Creek to the west of the proposed area.
Soils
The petition notes that the predominant soils in the western
portion of the proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area are found on an
older alluvial fan. Classified as Durixeralfs and Haploxeralfs, the
soils series found there include a complex of Redding, Corning, Pentz,
and Hadlesville soils, which are generally of low vigor. Older soils,
including patches of significantly older soils, are found in the higher
eastern elevations of the proposed viticultural area. These older soils
formed from sedimentary, metamorphic, and volcanic rock, including
Sierra basement granite. Also, the Cosumnes River, Deer Creek, and the
Laguna have left older river deposits within the proposed Sloughhouse
viticultural area, according to the petition.
Climate
The petition uses statistics and data from the Lodi, Sacramento and
especially the Folsom weather stations, located close to the proposed
Sloughhouse viticultural area. The petition explains that the proposed
Sloughhouse viticultural area has a climate distinguishable from the
surrounding proposed viticultural areas due to its combination of warm
growing season temperatures and heavy winter rains.
The Sloughhouse area, at 61.6 mean annual degrees Fahrenheit, is
the warmest of the seven proposed viticultural areas within the
established Lodi viticultural area, the petition states. The average
growing season degree-day total of the Sloughhouse area, according to
the petition, is more than 200 total degree days higher than the Alta
Mesa area to the immediate west and 300 total degree days higher than
the cooler Borden Ranch and Clements Hills areas to the south.
The proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area, the petition claims,
has little marine sea breeze influence as compared to other proposed
viticultural areas to the west, which are closer to the Sacramento
Delta. Also, the Alta Mesa ``table-top'' landform, to the immediate
west, acts as a buffer between the west-to-east marine breezes and the
proposed Sloughhouse area.
The proposed Sloughhouse viticultural area receives more rain, 23-
inches annually according to petition documentation, than the other
proposed viticultural areas discussed in this notice. The petition
states that to the west of the proposed Sloughhouse area, the proposed
Alta Mesa viticultural area averages 18.5 inches annual rainfall, and,
to the south, the proposed Borden Ranch viticultural area averages 20
inches annual rainfall. Also, other proposed viticultural areas
discussed in this notice average as low as 14 inches of annual
rainfall, the petition notes.
In addition, fog is less frequent in the proposed Sloughhouse
viticultural area than in the adjacent lower elevation and cooler
proposed Alta Mesa viticultural area to the west, the petition states.
The upland environment, with less cooling marine influence and warmer
temperatures, discourages the formation of fog.
Boundary Description
See the narrative boundary descriptions of the seven petitioned-for
viticultural areas in the proposed regulatory texts published at the
end of this notice.
Maps
The petitioner provided the required maps for the proposed seven
viticultural areas, and we list them below in the appropriate proposed
regulatory texts below.
Impact on Current Wine Labels
Part 4 of the TTB regulations prohibits any label reference on a
wine that indicates or implies an origin other than the wine's true
place of origin. If we establish the proposed ``Jahant'' or
``Sloughhouse'' viticultural areas, the name in question will be
recognized as a name of viticultural significance. If we establish the
proposed ``Alta Mesa,'' ``Borden Ranch,'' or ``Clements Hills,''
viticultural areas, the full name of the viticultural area in question
will be recognized as a name of viticultural significance. On the other
hand, we do not believe that any single part of these three proposed
viticultural area names standing alone, such as ``Mesa,'' ``Borden,''
or ``Clements'' would have viticultural significance if we establish
the viticultural area in question.
If we establish the proposed ``Cosumnes River'' or ``Mokelumne
River'' viticultural areas, the full name of the viticultural area in
question will be recognized as a name of viticultural significance. In
addition, with the establishment of the Cosumnes River or Mokelumne
River viticultural areas, the name ``Cosumnes'' or the name
``Mokelumne'' standing alone will be considered a term of viticultural
significance because consumers and vintners could reasonably attribute
the quality, reputation, or other characteristic of wine made from
grapes grown in the proposed Cosumnes River or Mokelumne River
viticultural area to the name Cosumnes or the name Mokelumne itself.
We note in this regard that a review of the information contained
in the Geographic Names Information System maintained by the USGS, and
a general search of relevant Internet Web sites reveal that the
``Cosumnes'' and ``Mokelumne'' names are not used in a variety of
different geographic contexts throughout the United States but rather
appear to apply in particular to the respective regions in California
encompassed by the two proposed viticultural areas. See 27 CFR
4.39(i)(3), which also provides that a name has viticultural
significance when determined by a TTB officer.
Therefore, the seven proposed 27 CFR part 9 section texts set forth
in this notice specify, respectively, that ``Alta Mesa,'' ``Borden
Ranch,'' ``Clements Hills,'' ``Cosumnes River'' and ``Cosumnes''
standing alone, ``Jahant,'' ``Mokelumne River'' and ``Mokelumne''
standing alone, and ``Sloughhouse'' are terms of viticultural
significance for purposes of part 4 of the TTB regulations.
Consequently, wine bottlers using any of those terms in a brand
[[Page 47750]]
name, including a trademark, or in another label reference as to the
origin of the wine, will have to ensure that the product is eligible to
use the name of the viticultural area in question as an appellation of
origin.
For a wine to be eligible to use as an appellation of origin, a
viticultural area name or term specified as being viticulturally
significant in part 9 of the TTB regulations, at least 85 percent of
the grapes used to make the wine must have been grown within the area
represented by that name or other term, and the wine must meet the
other conditions listed in 27 CFR 4.25(e)(3). If the wine is not
eligible to use as an appellation of origin, a viticultural area name
or other viticulturally significant term that appears in the brand
name, then the label is not in compliance and the bottler must change
the brand name and obtain approval of a new label. Similarly, if the
viticultural area name or other viticulturally significant term appears
in another reference on the label in a misleading manner, the bottler
would have to obtain approval of a new label. Accordingly, if a new
label or a previously approved label uses one of the viticultural area
names or other viticulturally significant terms identified above for a
wine that does not meet the 85 percent standard, the new label will not
be approved, and the previously approved label will be subject to
revocation, once the viticultural area in question is approved.
Different rules apply if a wine has a brand name containing a
viticultural area name that was used as a brand name on a label
approved before July 7, 1986. See 27 CFR 4.39(i)(2) for details.
We also note that the establishment of any or all of these seven
proposed viticultural areas will not affect the established Lodi
viticultural area or approved labels using the ``Lodi'' name.
Public Participation
Comments Invited
We invite comments from interested members of the public on whether
we should establish any or all of the seven proposed viticultural areas
within the existing Lodi viticultural area. We are also interested in
receiving comments on the sufficiency and accuracy of the names,
climactic, boundary, and other required information submitted in
support of the petitions. Please provide any available specific
information in support of your comments. Also, please identify the
specific proposed viticultural area or areas that your comments
concern.
Because of the potential impact of the establishment of the seven
proposed viticultural areas on brand labels that include the words
``Alta Mesa,'' ``Borden Ranch,'' ``Clements Hills,'' ``Cosumnes River''
(or ``Cosumnes'' alone), ``Jahant,'' ``Mokelumne River'' (or
``Mokelumne'' alone), or ``Sloughhouse,'' as discussed above under
Impact on Current Wine Labels, we are particularly interested in
comments regarding whether there will be a conflict between any of the
proposed areas names and currently used brand names. If a commenter
believes that a conflict will arise, the comment should describe the
nature of that conflict, including any negative economic impact that
approval of the proposed viticultural area in question will have on an
existing viticultural enterprise. We are also interested in receiving
suggestions for ways to avoid any conflicts, for example, by adopting
modified or different names for the viticultural area.
Submitting Comments
Please submit your comments by the closing date shown above in this
notice. Your comments must include this notice number and your name and
mailing address. In addition, please identify the specific proposed
viticultural area or areas that your comments concern. Your comments
must be legible and written in language acceptable for public
disclosure. We do not acknowledge receipt of comments, and we consider
all comments as originals. You may submit comments in one of five ways:
Mail: You may send written comments to TTB at the address
listed in the ADDRESSES section.
Facsimile: You may submit comments by facsimile
transmission to 202-927-8525. Faxed comments must--
(1) Be on 8.5- by 11-inch paper;
(2) Contain a legible, written signature; and
(3) Be no more than five pages long. This limitation assures
electronic access to our equipment. We will not accept faxed comments
that exceed five pages.
E-mail: You may e-mail comments to nprm@ttb.gov. Comments
transmitted by electronic mail must--
(1) Contain your e-mail address;
(2) Reference this notice number on the subject line; and
(3) Be legible when printed on 8.5- by 11-inch paper.
Online form: We provide a comment form with the online
copy of this notice on our Web site at http://www.ttb.gov/alcohol/rules/index.htm.
Select the ``Send comments via e-mail'' link under
this notice number.
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: To submit comments to us via
the Federal e-rulemaking portal, visit http://www.regulations.gov and
follow the instructions for submitting comments.
You may also write to the Administrator before the comment closing
date to ask for a public hearing. The Administrator reserves the right
to determine, in light of all circumstances, whether to hold a public
hearing.
Confidentiality
All submitted material is part of the public record and subject to
disclosure. Do not enclose any material in your comments that you
consider confidential or inappropriate for public disclosure.
Public Disclosure
You may view copies of this notice, the petition, the appropriate
maps, and any comments we receive by appointment at the TTB Library at
1310 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20220. You may also obtain copies at
20 cents per 8.5- x 11-inch page. Contact our librarian at the above
address or by telephone at 202-927-2400 to schedule an appointment or
to request copies of comments.
For your convenience, we will post this notice and any comments we
receive on this proposal on the TTB Web site. We may omit voluminous
attachments or material that we consider unsuitable for posting. In all
cases, the full comment will be available in the TTB Library. To access
the online copy of this notice and any submitted comments, visit http://www.ttb.gov/alcohol/rules/index.htm.
Select the ``View Comments'' link
under this notice number to view the posted comments.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
We certify that this proposed regulation, if adopted, would not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The proposed regulation imposes no new reporting,
recordkeeping, or other administrative requirement. Any benefit derived
from the use of a viticultural area name would be the result of a
proprietor's efforts and consumer acceptance of wines from that area.
Therefore, no regulatory flexibility analysis is required.
Executive Order 12866
This proposed rule is not a significant regulatory action as
defined by Executive Order 12866, 58 FR 51735. Therefore, it requires
no regulatory assessment.
[[Page 47751]]
Drafting Information
N. A. Sutton and M.D. Hoover of the Regulations and Procedures
Division drafted this notice.
List of Subjects in 27 CFR Part 9
Wine.
Proposed Regulatory Amendment
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, we propose to amend 27
CFR, chapter I, part 9, as follows:
PART 9--AMERICAN VITICULTURAL AREAS
1. The authority citation for part 9 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 27 U.S.C. 205.
2. Amend subpart C by adding Sec. 9.---- through Sec. 9.---- to
read as follows:
Subpart C--American Viticultural Areas
Sec. 9.---- Alta Mesa.
(a) Name. The name of the viticultural area described in this
section is ``Alta Mesa''. For purposes of part 4 of this chapter,
``Alta Mesa'' is a term of viticultural significance.
(b) Approved maps. The seven USGS, 1:24,000 scale, topographic
quadrangle maps used to determine the boundaries of the Alta Mesa
viticultural area are titled--
(1) North Lodi, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1976;
(2) Galt, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980;
(3) Florin, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980;
(4) Elk Grove, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1979;
(5) Sloughhouse, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980, minor revision
1993;
(6) Clay, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980, minor revision 1993; and
(7) Lockeford, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1979, minor revision
1993.
(c) Boundary. The Alta Mesa viticultural area is located in
Sacramento County, California, and is entirely within the Lodi
viticultural area (27 CFR 9.107). The Alta Mesa viticultural area
boundary is as follows:
(1) The beginning point is on the Lodi North map at the
intersection of Kost Road and the Southern Pacific railway, section 34,
T5N, R6E. From this point, proceed north-northwest 8.7 miles along the
Southern Pacific railway to its intersection with State Route 99 at
McConnel, section 20, T6N, R6E (Galt Quadrangle), then
(2) Proceed northwest 4.7 miles on State Route 99 to its
intersection with Sheldon Road at the northern boundary of section 26,
T7N, R5E (Florin Quadrangle); then
(3) Proceed east 5.2 miles on Sheldon Road to its intersection with
the Central California Traction railroad at the northern boundary of
section 27, T7N, R6E (Elk Grove Quadrangle); then
(4) Proceed southeast 3.85 miles along the Central California
Traction railroad to Grant Line Road, then southwest on Grant Line Road
to Wilton Road at the hamlet of Sheldon, and then continue southeast on
Wilton Road to its intersection with Dillard Road, section 6, T6N, R7E
(Elk Grove Quadrangle); then
(5) Proceed northeast 2.6 miles on Dillard Road to its intersection
with Lee Shorthorn Road, T7N, R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle); then
(6) Proceed southeast 0.9 mile on Lee Shorthorn Road to its
intersection with Tavernor Road, T7N, R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle);
then
(7) Proceed south 0.95 mile on Tavernor Road to its first 90 degree
turn to the west (where two unimproved roads join Tavernor Road from
the east and south), section 4, T6N, R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle); then
(8) Continue due south 1 mile in a straight line to the line's
intersection with the 105-foot contour line and an unimproved extension
of Blake Road, section 9, T6N, R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle);
(9) Proceed west 0.3 mile on the unimproved extension of Blake Road
to its intersection with Tavernor Road, section 9, T6N, R7E
(Sloughhouse Quadrangle); then
(10) Proceed south 0.7 mile on Tavernor Road to the center of the
loop at the end of the road, section 16, T6N, R7E (Sloughhouse
Quadrangle); then
(11) Proceed southwest in a straight line for 0.1 mile to the
line's intersection with the east end of the landing strip shown in the
northwest quadrant of section 16, T6N, R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle);
then
(12) Proceed west along the landing strip and a line extending from
its western end to the line's intersection with Alta Mesa Road on the
eastern boundary of section 17, T6N, R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle); then
(13) Proceed south 6.1 miles on Alta Mesa Road, crossing State
Route 104, to Alta Mesa Road's intersection with Borden Road at the
southwest corner of section 9, T5N, R7E (Clay Quadrangle); then
(14) Proceed east 1 mile on Borden Road to its intersection with
Alabama Road at the southeast corner of section 9, T5N, R7E (Clay
Quadrangle); then
(15) Proceed south 2 miles on Alabama Road to its intersection with
Simmerhorn Road at the southeast corner of section 21, T5N, R7E (Clay
Quadrangle); then
(16) Proceed east 2 miles on Simmerhorn Road to its intersection
with Clay Station Road at the northeast corner of section 26, T5N, R7E
(Clay Quadrangle); then
(17) Proceed south 0.5 mile on Clay Station Road to its
intersection with Dry Creek, section 26, T5N, R7E (Clay Quadrangle);
then
(18) Proceed west-southwest (downstream) 7.8 miles along Dry Creek,
crossing over the northwest corner of the Lockeford map, and twice
crossing over the southeast corner of the Galt map, to Dry Creek's
intersection with Lincoln Way, section 35, T5N, R6E (Lodi North
Quadrangle); then
(19) Proceed northwest 0.1 mile on Lincoln Way to its intersection
with Kost Road, section 35, T5N, R6E (Lodi North Quadrangle); and
(20) Proceed west 0.3 mile on Kost Road and return to the beginning
point at the intersection of Kost Road and the Southern Pacific
railway, returning to the beginning point.
Sec. 9.---- Borden Ranch.
(a) Name. The name of the viticultural area described in this
section is ``Borden Ranch''. For purposes of part 4 of this chapter,
``Borden Ranch'' is a term of viticultural significance.
(b) Approved maps. The six USGS, 1:24,000 scale, topographic
quadrangle maps used to determine the boundaries of the Borden Ranch
viticultural area are titled--
(1) Lockeford, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1979, minor revision
1993;
(2) Clay, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980, minor revision 1993;
(3) Sloughhouse, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980, minor revision
1993;
(4) Carbondale, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980, minor revision
1993;
(5) Goose Creek, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980, minor revision
1993; and
(6) Clements, Calif., 1968, minor revision 1993.
(c) Boundary. The Borden Ranch viticultural area is located in
Sacramento and San Joaquin Counties, California, and is entirely within
the Lodi viticultural area (27 CFR 9.107). The Borden Ranch
viticultural area boundary is as follows:
(1) The beginning point is on the Lockeford map at the intersection
of Liberty Road and Elliott Road at the southwest corner of section 36,
T5N, R7E. From the beginning point, proceed north 2 miles on Elliot
Road, which becomes Clay Station Road upon crossing the Sacramento-San
Joaquin
[[Page 47752]]
County line at Dry Creek, to Clay Station Road's intersection with
Simmerhorn Road, at the southeast corner of section 23, T5N, R7E (Clay
Quadrangle); then
(2) Proceed west 2 miles on Simmerhorn Road to its intersection
with Alabama Road at the southwest corner of section 22, T5N, R7E (Clay
Quadrangle); then
(3) Proceed north 2 miles on Alabama Road to its intersection with
Borden Road at the northwest corner of section 15, T5N, R7E (Clay
Quadrangle); then
(4) Proceed west 1 mile on Borden Road to its intersection with
Alta Mesa Road at the southwest corner of section 9, T5N, R7E (Clay
Quadrangle); then
(5) Proceed north 1.35 miles on Alta Mesa Road, crossing State
Route 104, to Alta Mesa Road's intersection with the Laguna tributary
along the western boundary line of section 4, T5N, R7E (Clay
Quadrangle); then
(6) Proceed easterly (upstream) about 16.5 miles along the
meandering Laguna tributary, crossing over the southeast corner of the
Sloughhouse map, to the Laguna's intersection with the Sacramento-
Amador County line, 0.75 mile south of the Ione Road, T6N, R9E
(Carbondale Quadrangle); then
(7) Proceed south and then southeast about 10.8 miles along the
Sacramento-Amador and Sacramento-San Joaquin County lines, crossing
over the Goose Creek map, to the County line's intersection with
Liberty Road, section 32, T5N, R9E (Clements Quadrangle); and
(8) Proceed west about 9.3 miles west along Liberty Road to its
intersection with Elliott Road, returning to the beginning point.
Sec. 9.---- Clements Hills.
(a) Name. The name of the viticultural area described in this
section is ``Clements Hills''. For purposes of part 4 of this chapter,
``Clements Hills'' is a term of viticultural significance.
(b) Approved maps. The six USGS 1:24,000 scale, topographic
quadrangle maps used to determine the boundaries of the Clements Hills
viticultural area are titled--
(1) Waterloo, Calif., 1968, photoinspected 1978;
(2) Lockeford, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1979, minor revision
1993;
(3) Clements, Calif., 1968, minor revision 1993;
(4) Wallace, Calif., 1962;
(5) Valley Springs SW., Calif., 1962, photoinspected 1973; and
(6) Linden, Calif., 1968, minor revision 1993.
(c) Boundary. The Clements Hills viticultural area is located in
San Joaquin County, California, and is entirely within the Lodi
viticultural area (27 CFR 9.107). The Clements Hills viticultural areas
boundary is as follows--
(1) The beginning point is on the Waterloo map at the intersection
of the Calaveras River and Jack Tone Road, section 31 west boundary
line, T3N, R8E. From that point, proceed north 6.9 miles on Jack Tone
Road to its intersection with Elliot Road in the village of Lockeford
(where Jack Tone Road is known as E. Hammond Street for a short
distance), section 30, T4N, R8E (Lockeford Quadrangle); then
(2) Proceed northwest 5.4 miles on Elliott Road, crossing the
Mokelumne River, to Elliott Road's intersection with Liberty Road at
the northwest corner of section 1, T4N, R7E, (Lockeford Quadrangle);
then
(3) Proceed east 9.3 miles on Liberty Road to its junction with the
San Joaquin-Amador County line, north of the Camanche Reservoir,
section 32, T5N, R9E (Clements Quadrangle); then
(4) Proceed south-southeast 13 miles along the San Joaquin-Amador
and San Joaquin-Calaveras County lines, crossing over the Wallace map,
to the County line's intersection with the Calaveras River, section 31,
T3N, R10E (Valley Springs SW. Quadrangle); and
(5) Proceed southwest (downstream) 14.2 miles along the Calaveras
River, crossing over the Linden map, to the river's intersection with
Jack Tone Road, returning to the beginning point.
Sec. 9.---- Cosumnes River.
(a) Name. The name of the viticultural area described in this
section is ``Cosumnes River''. For purposes of part 4 of this chapter,
``Cosumnes River'' and ``Cosumnes'' are terms of viticultural
significance.
(b) Approved maps. The six USGS, 1:24,000 scale, topographic
quadrangle maps used to determine the boundaries of the Cosumnes River
viticultural area are titled--
(1) Bruceville, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980;
(2) Florin, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980;
(3) Elk Grove, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1979;
(4) Galt, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980;
(5) Lodi North, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1976; and
(6) Thornton, Calif., 1978.
(c) Boundary. The Cosumnes River viticultural area is located in
Sacramento County, California, and is entirely within the Lodi
viticultural area (27 CFR 9.107). The Cosumnes River viticultural area
boundary is as follows--
(1) The beginning point is on the Bruceville map at the
intersection of the Mokelumne River and Interstate Highway 5, T5N, R5E.
From that point, north 8.5 miles along Interstate 5 to its intersection
with an unnamed light duty road, locally known to the west of Franklin
as Hood-Franklin Road, section 18, T6N, R5E (Florin Quadrangle); then
(2) Proceed east 1.2 miles straight on Hood-Franklin Road to its
intersection with Franklin Boulevard in the village of Franklin,
section 17, T6N, R5E (Florin Quadrangle); then
(3) Proceed north 4.3 miles on Franklin Boulevard to its
intersection with Sims Road on the west and Sheldon Road to the east at
the northwest corner of section 28, T7N, R5E (Florin Quadrangle); then
(4) Proceed east 2.4 miles on Sheldon Road to its intersection with
State Route 99 at the northern boundary section 26, T7N, R5E (Florin
Quadrangle); then
(5) Then proceed south-southeast 6 miles on State Route 99,
crossing over the Elk Grove map, to the road's intersection with the
Southern Pacific railway line at McConnell, section 20, T6N, R6E (Galt
Quadrangle); then
(6) Proceed south-southeast 8.7 miles along the Southern Pacific
railway line to its intersection with Kost Road, section 34, T5N, R6E
(Lodi North Quadrangle); then
(7) Proceed west and then north 3.8 miles on Kost Road to its
intersection with New Hope Road, T5N, R6E (Lodi North Quadrangle); then
(8) Proceed west then south 2.8 miles on New Hope Road to its
intersection with the Mokelumne River and the Sacramento-San Joaquin
County line, T5N, R5E (Thornton Quadrangle); and
(9) Proceed northerly then westerly (downstream) for about 2.7
miles along the meandering Mokelumne River to its intersection with
Interstate 5, returning to the beginning point.
Sec. 9.---- Jahant.
(a) Name. The name of the viticultural area described in this
section is ``Jahant''. For purposes of part 4 of this chapter,
``Jahant'' is a term of viticultural significance.
(b) Approved maps. The five USGS, 1:24000 scale, topographic
quadrangle maps used to determine the boundaries of the Jahant
viticultural area are titled--
(1) Lodi North, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1976;
(2) Thornton, Calif., 1978;
(3) Galt, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980;
(4) Lockeford, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1979; and
(5) Clay, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980, minor revision 1993.
[[Page 47753]]
(c) Boundary. The Jahant viticultural area is located in Sacramento
and San Joaquin Counties, California, and is entirely with the Lodi
viticultural area (27 CFR 9.107). The Jahant viticultural area boundary
is as follows--
(1) The beginning point is on the Lodi North map at the
intersection of Peltier Road and the Mokelumne River, section 16 south
boundary line, T4N, R6E. From the beginning point, proceed westerly
(downstream) 6.7 miles along the Mokelumne River to its intersection
with New Hope Road, about 0.7 mile north of the village of Thornton,
T5N, R5E (Thornton Quadrangle); then
(2) Proceed north then east for 3 miles on New Hope Road to its
intersection with Kost Road, T5N, R6E (Lodi North Quadrangle); then
(3) Proceed south then east for 4.1 miles on Kost Road to its
intersection with Lincoln Way, section 35, T5N, R6E (Lodi North
Quadrangle); then
(4) Proceed southeast 0.15 mile on Lincoln Way to its intersection
with Dry Creek, section 35, T5N, R6E (Lodi North Quadrangle); then
(5) Proceed easterly (upstream) 7 miles along Dry Creek, crossing
twice over and back at the southeast corner of the Galt map, and then
crossing over the northwest corner of the Lockeford map, to Dry Creek's
intersection with Elliott Road, section 26, T5N, R7E (Clay Quadrangle);
then
(6) Proceed south 4.5 miles on Elliott Road to its intersection
with Peltier Road at the southeast corner of section 14, T4N, R7E
(Lockeford Quadrangle); and
(7) Proceed west 8.3 miles on Peltier Road to its intersection with
the Mokelumne River, returning to the beginning point.
Sec. 9.---- Mokelumne River.
(a) Name. The name of the viticultural area described in this
section is ``Mokelumne River''. For purposes of part 4 of this chapter,
``Mokelumne River'' and ``Mokelumne'' are terms of viticultural
significance.
(b) Approved maps. The seven USGS, 1:24,000 scale, topographic
quadrangle maps used to determine the boundaries of the Mokelumne River
viticultural area are titled--
(1) Lodi South, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1976;
(2) Terminous, Calif., 1978, minor revision 1993;
(3) Thornton, Calif., 1978;
(4) Bruceville, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980;
(5) Lodi North, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1976;
(6) Lockeford, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1979, minor revision
1993; and
(7) Waterloo, Calif., edition of 1968, photoinspected 1978.
(c) Boundary. The Mokelumne River viticultural area is located in
San Joaquin County, California, and is entirely within the Lodi
viticultural area (27 CFR 9.107). The Mokelumne River viticultural area
boundary is as follows--
(1) The beginning point is on the Lodi South map at the
intersection of Eightmile Road and Interstate 5, section 36 south
boundary line, T3N, R5E. From the beginning point, proceed north-
northwest 14.7 miles on Interstate 5, crossing over the Terminous and
Thornton maps, to the Interstate's intersection with the Mokelumne
River, T5N, R6E (Bruceville Quadrangle); then
(2) Proceed southeast (upstream) 5 miles along the meandering
Mokelumne River to its intersection with Peltier Road, section 16, T4N,
R6E (Lodi North Quadrangle); then
(3) Proceed east 8.3 miles along Peltier Road to its intersection
with Elliott Road at the northeast corner of section 23, T4N, R7E
(Lockeford Quadrangle); then
(4) Proceed south then southeast 2.3 miles on Elliott Road to its
intersection with Jack Tone Road in the village of Lockeford (where
Jack Tone Road is known as E. Hammond Street for a short distance),
section 30, T4N, R8E (Lockeford Quadrangle); then
(5) Proceed south 6.7 miles on Jack Tone Road to its intersection
with the Calaveras River, section 36 east boundary line, T3N, R7E
(Waterloo Quadrangle); then
(6) Proceed southwesterly (downstream) 0.9 mile along the
meandering Calaveras River to its intersection with Eightmile Road,
section 36 south boundary line, T3N, R7E (Waterloo Quadrangle); and
(7) Proceed west 8.6 miles on Eightmile Road to its intersection
with Interstate 5, returning to the beginning point.
Sec. 9.---- Sloughhouse.
(a) Name. The name of the viticultural area described in this
section is ``Sloughhouse''. For purposes of part 4 of this chapter,
``Sloughhouse'' is a term of viticultural significance.
(b) Approved maps. The six USGS, 1:24,000 scale, topographic
quadrangle maps used to determine the boundaries of the Sloughhouse
viticultural area are titled--
(1) Clay, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980, minor revision 1993;
(2) Sloughhouse, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980, minor revision
1993;
(3) Elk Grove, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1979;
(4) Buffalo Creek, Calif., 1967, photorevised 1980;
(5) Folsom SE, Calif., 1954, photorevised 1980; and
(6) Carbondale, Calif., 1968, photorevised 1980, minor revision
1993.
(c) Boundary. The Sloughhouse viticultural area is located in
Sacramento County, California, and is entirely within the Lodi
viticultural area (27 CFR 9.107). The Sloughhouse viticultural area
boundary is as follows--
(1) The beginning point is on the Clay map at the intersection of
the Laguna estuary and Alta Mesa Road, on the western boundary of
section 4, T5N, R7E. From the beginning point, proceed north 4.8 miles
on Alta Mesa Road to the road's intersection with a line drawn due west
from the western end of the landing strip shown in the northwestern
quadrant of section 16, T6N, R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle); then
(2) Proceed east 0.5 mile east to the eastern end of the landing
strip, section 16, T6N, R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle); then
(3) Proceed northeast in a straight line 0.1 mile to the center of
the loop at the south end of Tavernor Road, section 16, T6N, R7E
(Sloughhouse Quadrangle); then
(4) Proceed north 0.75 mile on Tavernor Road to its intersection
with Blake Road, section 9, T6N, R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle); then
(5) Proceed east 0.5 mile on the unimproved extension of Blake Road
to its intersection with the 105-foot elevation line, section 9, T6N,
R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle); then
(6) Proceed due north about 0.85 mile to the 90 degree turn in
Tavernor Road and continue north about 0.9 mile on Tavernor Road to its
intersection with Lee Shorthorn Road, T7N, R7E, (Sloughhouse
Quadrangle); then
(7) Proceed northwest 0.9 mile on Lee Shorthorn Road to
intersection with Dillard Road, T7N, R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle); then
(8) Proceed southwest about 2.6 miles on Dillard Road to its
intersection with Wilton Road at the hamlet of Dillard, section 6, T6N,
R7E (Elk Grove Quadrangle); then
(9) Proceed northwest 3.1 miles on Wilton Road to its intersection
with Grant Line Road at the hamlet of Sheldon, section 27, T7N, R6E
(Elk Grove Quadrangle); then
(10) Proceed northwest on Grant Line Road to its intersection with
State Route 16 (Jackson Road), section 33, T8N, R7E (Buffalo Creek
Quadrangle); then
(11) Proceed east-southeast 1.6 miles on State Route 16 to its
intersection with Deer Creek at BM 108 near
[[Page 47754]]
Sloughhouse, T8N, R7E (Sloughhouse Quadrangle); then
(12) Proceed northeasterly (upstream) about 11 miles along the
meandering Deer Creek, crossing over the southeast corner of the
Buffalo Creek map, to the creek's intersection with the Sacramento-El
Dorado County line, section 1, T8N, R8E (Folsom, S.E. Quadrangle); then
(13) Proceed south-southeast followed by south for about 12.4 miles
along the Sacramento-El Dorado and Sacramento-Amador County line to the
County line's intersection with the Laguna estuary, 0.75 mile south of
the Ione Road, T6N, R9E (Carbondale Quadrangle); and
(14) Proceed westerly (downstream) 17.5 miles along the meandering
Laguna, crossing over the Sloughhouse map, returning to the beginning
point at the intersection of the Laguna estuary and Alta Mesa Road,
section 4, T5N, R7E. (Clay Quadrangle).
Signed: July 22, 2005.
John J. Manfreda,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 05-16132 Filed 8-12-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-31-P