Suzanne Roig has been a reporter with 国产偷拍 since 2018 covering business and health in the region. When she's not working she enjoys taking her dog Pono out on hikes.
A 5.4-acre vineyard just north of the Bend city limits has divided the small community surrounding it by seeking county approval to operate a tasting room.
Lava Terrace Cellars LLC, which operates on land zoned multiuse agricultural, needs a conditional use permit before it can host private tastings. The 15-home community off Hunnell Road and Bowery Lane is divided about the idea: nine opposed and five in favor.
A tasting room is a compatible use for land zoned for agricultural use, but the vineyard is located in a community governed by a homeowners association that owns the private one-lane road through the area.
The concern by neighbors is that in Oregon, wineries may only be located on land zoned exclusive farm use and be a minimum of 15 acres, but Lava Terrace Cellars meets neither requirement.
In the most recent action on the vineyard鈥檚 request, the Deschutes County Commission agreed to let the owners of Lava Terrace Cellars add more information to its application before a decision is made if it can host commercial activities on its property.
Winery origins
When Duane and Dina Barker, the owners of Lava Terrace Cellars, started their vineyard in 2012, they intended to grow grapes and make wine for themselves. But in 2020 they realized there might be a market for wine produced in Deschutes County.
Their first crop was in 2017, and they shipped their grapes to a winery in Medford, said Duane Barker. The couple launched its wine label in 2020, just at the start of the pandemic. As the pandemic waned, the vineyard held tastings at local retailers, he said.
鈥淚t became apparent that when the public was able to taste our wines, they loved them and would purchase bottles for home consumption,鈥 Duane Barker said. 鈥淭he question came up more and more: Do you have a tasting room?
鈥淲e already have the buildings, the vineyard and now have the transportation to our property solved being only 400 feet from the newly paved Hunnell Road.鈥
Last year the winery produced 700 cases of wine, said Dina Barker. It plans to make a maximum of 2,000 cases of wine a year, Duane Barker said.
鈥淲hat we want to do is a small tasting room, maybe six to eight people at a time at the vineyard, by appointment only during the growing season 鈥 May to the end of September,鈥 said Dina Barker. 鈥淥ur intention is to have customers come out and experience the wine, see the vineyard. It鈥檚 a personal experience at the vineyard.鈥
The vineyard can be accessed via a one-lane road from either U.S. Highway 97 or from Hunnell Road.
Commercial activity
The vineyard has an Oregon Liquor & Cannabis Commission license to sell alcohol on premises that expires Sept. 30, according to public records.
The vineyard does not produce wine on the site yet, Duane Barker said. At some point, the couple would like to produce the wine on site to reduce the carbon footprint of having to transfer the grapes to another production site, she said.
鈥淭he grapes will never have to leave property,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he goal is to create (an) estate winery situation. It鈥檚 very low impact.鈥
Toby Bayard, who filed an appeal against the winery鈥檚 conditional use permit request, feels that commercial activity will permanently alter the tenor of the community.
鈥淲e have a neighborhood here with a community association that dates back to 1966,鈥 Bayard said. 鈥淲e own the road and we鈥檒l have people drinking on our road.鈥
Suzanne Roig has been a reporter with 国产偷拍 since 2018 covering business and health in the region. When she's not working she enjoys taking her dog Pono out on hikes.
Toby Bayard either just wants to not believe what Oregon Law says about where or where not a winery can be located or she is just making this up. The law says that IF you have EFU land , Exclusive Farm USE and you want to have a commercial activity in conjunction with Farm use, you must have 15 acres. This law ONLY pertains to EFU zone, Not MUA10 which the vineyard is on. It is that simple and there has not been an association going back to 1966. That is not factual either. DB
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Toby Bayard either just wants to not believe what Oregon Law says about where or where not a winery can be located or she is just making this up. The law says that IF you have EFU land , Exclusive Farm USE and you want to have a commercial activity in conjunction with Farm use, you must have 15 acres. This law ONLY pertains to EFU zone, Not MUA10 which the vineyard is on. It is that simple and there has not been an association going back to 1966. That is not factual either. DB
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Keep it Clean. Please avoid obscene, vulgar, lewd, racist or sexually-oriented language.
PLEASE TURN OFF YOUR CAPS LOCK.
Don't Threaten. Threats of harming another person will not be tolerated.
Be Truthful. Don't knowingly lie about anyone or anything.
Be Nice. No racism, sexism or any sort of -ism that is degrading to another person.
Be Proactive. Use the 'Report' link on each comment to let us know of abusive posts.
Share with Us. We'd love to hear eyewitness accounts, the history behind an article.