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=Killington Wine Festival.  Wine Tasting at Killington Peak

Killington Wine Festival
Wine Tasting at Killington Peak 

I had the good fortune of taking the K1 gondola to the top of Killington today for an afternoon of wine tasting. It's a tough job, but somebody has to do it!

The Killington Wine Festival kicked off this afternoon with a private wine tasting at the Killington peak restaurant for the "trade", better know as retailers, restaurant, and bar owners. The 4 primary wine distributors in Killington collectively brought almost 200 wines from around the world to be tasted in the afternoon event.

The purpose of today was twofold. First and foremost to the distributors, they had a chance to showcase their wares to people responsible for buying and presenting wine to the general public. In addition to that, it was also a chance to dry run the Killington venue before the open public tasting of the same wines on Saturday afternoon.

If you have a chance to go to the tasting on Saturday, check out some of my favorites from this afternoons tasting: Domaine Zind-Humbrecht Pinot d'Alsace from France and K Syrah from Australia at the G. Housen tables; Sincerely Sauvignon Blanc and Shiraz from Sourh Africa, and Cadonini Pinot Grigio from Italy at the Baker tables; White Oak Chardonnay from the Russian River Valley at the Vermont Wine Merchants tables, and Liberty School Shiraz from Paso Robles and Hayman and Hill Pinot Noir from the Santa Lucia Highlands at the Farrell Distributors tables.

Crowley Cheese Company, Healdville VT.

Crowley Cheese Company, Healdville VT. 

Another one of the cheeses to be featured at the wine dinner at Birch Ridge on Saturday night comes from the Crowley Cheese Factory in Healdville Vermont. Believed to be the oldest continously operating cheese factory in the western hemisphere, Crowley's cheesemaking history began in 1824, but it was not until 1882, when Winfield Crowley built the present-day factory.

Crowley Cheese is made a few hundred pounds a day in the same building entirely by hand, exactly the same way as in the last century. The cheese, classified as a Colby, is similar to English Style cheddars, but not as acidic or dry. It has a nice sharpness, but it is also quite creamy in texture. At the wine dinner on Saturday night at Birch Ridge, Crowley Cheese will be one of the featured cheeses served with the dessert course.

Plymouth Cheese Company, Plymouth VT.

Plymouth Cheese Company, Plymouth VT. 

The Killington Wine Festival is set to run this coming weekend. Here at Birch Ridge, we will be hosting a wine dinner on Saturday evening. For the food to go with the wine, we have aimed somewhat at a Vermont theme, featuring where ever possible items procured in Vermont. One of the items we are going to integrate into the dinner is cheese produced at the Plymouth Cheese Factory, in Plymouth Vermont, at the Calvin Coolidge birthplace.

The cheese is a "granular stirred curd" cheese, produced at the Plymouth Cheese Factory by a company whimsically named Frog City Cheese. The cheese is made using an original process handed down by the Coolidge family for generations. The cheese has a tangy, rich flavor, and will be used at the wine dinner as one of the table cheeses accompanying the dessert course.

Innkeepers Bill Vines and Mary Furlong (right) of the Birch Ridge Inn at Killington give

Innkeepers Bill Vines and Mary Furlong (right) of the Birch Ridge Inn at Killington give "Team Killington" organizers Noel and Dick Gluck (left) a check for $480.00 to support the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation. 

Mary and I were very happy to donate the proceeds from a special Sunday brunch we held at the inn on June 25th to raise money for "Team Killington" and the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation. We had a little check handing ceremony in a side garden at the Inn over the weekend to provide the check to "Team Killington".

For the last several years, good friends of ours, Dick and Noel Gluck, have organized other Killington area residents and guests to form "Team Killington" to participate in the Vermont "Race for the Cure" to raise funds for the Komen foundation. Last year they organized almost 100 runners to trek down to Manchester Vermont for the "Race". This years race takes place on July 30th. If you would like to sponsor "Team Killington" you can get in touch with me through the contact link of killingtonblog, and I will link you up with the Glucks. They would love your support for this good cause.

Green Mountain National Golf Course, Hole #14

Green Mountain National Golf Course

Hole # 14
 

If you have ever been interested in playing golf in Killington, now is a great time. The rains that the area had several weeks ago have resulted in beautiful lush green golf courses.

Both the Killington Resort Course and the Green Mountain National Golf Course have dried out nicely from the soaking rains of June. And it's a good thing as well. During July, local play changes. In June the area hosts a large number of Charity golf tournaments. In July, it gets more more personal with club championships and president's cups on the line.

Thus far in the July tournaments, the innkeepers of Birch Ridge have had mixed results. Mary played her Presidents Cup match on Monday. Unfortunately she went down to defeat when her opponent holed a chip shot on the 18th green. I faired a little better. My round earlier today started ugly, but I played the back nine at Green Mountain in a 4 over par 39 (with a double bogey on the 18th) beating my opponent 4 and 2 on the 16th green, to advance to the next round.

If you like golf, and you have a chance to come to Vermont, you should really think about playing a few rounds on the great courses at Killington this summer.

Great Big Bertha

Great Big Bertha 

A trusted friend was gravely injured on the links at the Green Mountain National Golf Course earlier this week. My trusty driver, "Great Big Bertha", has succumbed to stress fractures on her graphite shaft where the shaft mates with the club head.

Great Big Bertha does not owe me anything. It has been a trusted club in my golf bag for at least 10 years. In terms of golf club years, particularly a driver, that is probably an eternity. Based upon an average year of 50 rounds of golf, I would guess that conservatively, I have used Bertha over 5000 times since she was added to my golf bag.

Stress Fractures on the graphite shaft of Great Big Bertha. (Click picture to see in detail)

I remember when I acquired Bertha. At the time, the club head on Bertha was considered huge. Over the last 10 years, golf club technology has changed with drivers. Today's drivers feature club heads approaching twice the size of Bertha. I have looked at people swinging the big drivers on the course and thinking that they were a little ungainly. But I guess over the next couple of weeks as I demo clubs, I will be able to find out for myself.

I have not had a chance to start demoing new drivers yet. Over the next couple of week, I will take some for a test drive. It will be an interesting process to see if my golf game improves with Bertha's demise.

Weigela

Weigela 

As a summer feature to the blog, I am happy to introduce the "Birch Ridge Flower of the Day"; a summer replacement for the venerable snowstake of last winter.

Ever since the winter has ended, I have been looking at various alternative to display in the spot the snowstake had previously occupied. I wanted to put in the space something that would show what my partner, Mary, and I experience everyday, that others might also enjoy. While working on a website for a client, there was a requirement to create a photo gallery. I had previously created just such a gallery last year to show opening day at Killington. That gallery was implemented in a computer scripting language called php. I was not all that happy with how it worked and presented pictures to blog readers, so I looked for other alternatives. If you have been mildly following technology topics on the internet, you may have run across a technology called "AJAX", which stands for "Asynchronous Javascript and XML" (aren't you glad I brought this up). Anyway, if you have used Googlemaps, you have already used AJAX. AJAX is a dynamic means to update web pages without reloading the entire age. Perfect for a user controllable photo gallery.

After several hours of programming, I created the "Birch Ridge Inn Flower of the Day", with a full photo gallery of previous flower pictures. If you click on the picture itself, it will load a full size picture into your browser window. If you click on the link at the bottom of the picture, it will take you to a photo gallery of previously posted "Flowers of the day" so you can tour the gardens at Birch Ridge.

Mary and I will be taking new pictures of flowers every day. It will be interesting to see how well this works as the summer progresses.