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Wooden sign pointing towards Gary Farrell block in a partner vineyard
Wooden sign pointing towards Gary Farrell block in a partner vineyard

Vineyard Partnerships

At Gary Farrell, our wines begin with relationships, not transactions. We work side by side with growers we trust, returning to the same vineyards year after year to understand their rhythms, nuances, and voice. These partnerships allow us to translate each site with clarity and restraint — letting the vineyards of the Russian River Valley speak for themselves.

Rochioli Vineyard
Bacigalupi Vineyard
Hallberg Vineyard
Gap's Crown Vineyard
Rochioli Vineyard

Long-Term Relationships,
Not Transactions

We don’t buy fruit. We build relationships.

Every vineyard we work with is a long-term collaboration and a creative choice. We don’t chase names. We go deep, not wide.

Some of these relationships span decades—like Rochioli Vineyard, where for over forty years we’ve worked on a handshake agreement, not a formal grape contract.

Longevity matters—and so do human relationships.

Bacigalupi Vineyard

Why Vineyard Partnerships Matter

Working with the same sites year after year teaches patience. You learn the rhythms. The shifts. The subtleties that only reveal themselves over time.

That understanding shapes every decision—from harvest timing to oak to blending. It’s how we can let the vineyard speak clearly without needing to amplify the message.

Hallberg Vineyard

Russian River Valley, Interpreted

We’ve helped define what Russian River Valley Pinot Noir and Chardonnay can be—not by planting flags everywhere, but by listening closely to the sites that continue to surprise us.

Other wineries may work with these vineyards. But no one interprets them the way we do.

Our role isn’t to dominate the voice of a place. It’s to translate it with honesty and restraint. To tell the story the way we heard it.

Gap's Crown Vineyard

A Shared Philosophy

Our growers share our core values and a belief in the long view. These partnerships are built on trust, respect, and a mutual willingness to adapt.

That’s why the wines feel grounded. And why they endure.