Wire and Posts
"This is a recent image from a trip to Sonoma. I'm always attracted to the trees in the vineyards, and their relationships to the vines. At this time of year they both take on a sculptural aspect with bare branches against the sky, at times criscrossed by the threads of exposed trellis wire." -- Michael Regnier
INSTRUCTIONS:
Download this image by right-clicking (Mac users, click and hold) on the image and selecting "save link as" or "save target as" and then select the desired location on your computer to save the image. Mac users can also just click the image and drag it to your desktop.
To set the image as your desktop wallpaper, Mac users should follow these instructions, while PC users should follow these.
PRINTS:
If you are interested in owning an archive quality print of this image, or any of the other vineyard images featured here on Vinography, you can purchase one on the Michael Regnier Photography web site for $85.
ABOUT VINOGRAPHY IMAGES:
Vinography regularly features images by photographer Michael Regnier for readers' personal use as desktop backgrounds or screen savers. We hope you enjoy them. Please respect the copyright on these images.
Digg it! -
Add to del.icio.us -
Add to Stumbleupon -
Add to Reddit
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: Vinography Images: Wire and Posts.
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.vinography.com/MT/mt-tb.cgi/7238
Wine Bloke
wrote:What a great image! It really does capture the vineyard well. Is that tree in the middle of the planting?
Arthur
wrote:Wine Bloke:
That looks like a CA oak - protected - and it's common to see them in the middle of the vineyards.
San Francisco Vintner's Market: April 10-11, San Francisco Where Malbec Comes From: Tasting the Wines of Cahors Vinography Images: The Golden Oak El Dorado Winery Association Tasting: March 20, San Francisco An Open Letter to Warren Buffett, Wine and Spirits Distributor Wine, Health, Science and Journalism: A Study in Headlines If Your Wine is Organic, Don't Tell Consumers Vinography in the Saveur Blog Awards Italy's Best Wines: Tasting the Tre Bicchieri 2010 Book Review: Continued Surveillance by Jake Lorenzo
Masuizumi Junmai Daiginjo, Toyama Prefecture Wine.Com Gives Retailers (and Consumers) the Finger 1961 Hospices de Beaune Emile Chandesais, Burgundy Wine Over Time The Better Half of My Palate 1999 Királyudvar "Lapis" Tokaji Furmint, Hungary What's Allowed in Your Wine and Winemaking Why Community Tasting Notes Sites Will Fail Appreciating Wine in Context The Soul vs. The Market 1989 Fiorano Botte 48 Semillion,Italy