Ohio
Make time for wine! June is Ohio Wine Month. Here’s what you need to know to celebrate
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Do you need an excuse to visit a winery? Not really. But the Ohio Department of Tourism has one ready, just in case.
June is Ohio Wine Month, and the state tourism department compiled a list of things to do in 2024 for Ohio Wine Month (more on that below).
Here’s what to know about Ohio Wine Month and how to celebrate it.
Buckeye State boasting: The highest-rated wine in the country is from Ohio
What is Ohio Wine Month?
Gov. John Kasich established Ohio Wine Month in 2012 to celebrate Ohio wines and winemakers, according to Drink Up Columbus.
“Ohio’s bustling wine and grape industries provide more than just great products,” said Tracy Intihar, Ohio Department of Agriculture (ODA) Interim Director, according to the Ohio Grape Industries Committee. “They create thousands of jobs and bring in billions of dollars to the state, in addition to providing local tasting rooms, beautiful vineyards, and top-notch food options to make memories with friends and family at Ohio’s wineries.”
Ohio’s wine industry brought in $6.6 billion in economic activity, created 40,399 jobs and generated $1.9 billion in wages, according to a study conducted by John Dunham & Associates and funded by the OGIC. In 2022, the data set used for this study, Ohio winemakers produced about 1.2 million gallons of wine in a 12-month period and ranked seventh in the country for wine economic output.
What to do during Ohio Wine Month
Ohio tourism’s list of 24 things to do for Ohio Wine Month has suggestions big and small, from traveling the state’s seven wine trails to supporting your local winery, as well as setting up a wine and cheese night at home. Here’s a look at some things to do:
Visit Ohio’s five recognized regions for growing wine grapes
The term “appellation” on a wine label denotes the geographic origin of the grapes used to produce it, according to the Ohio Grape Industries Committee. To use the term on a label, 85% of that wine must be produced from grapes grown in that area.
In the United States, the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau regulates viticulture (the study of grape cultivation for wine making) appellations. And Ohio has five of them, according to the committee. They include:
- Lake Erie: The Lake Erie AVA is an American Viticultural Area that includes 2,236,800 acres of land on the south shore of Lake Erie in Ohio, New York, and Pennsylvania.
- Isle St. George: The Isle St. George AVA is located on North Bass Island in Lake Erie. Over half of the island is planted for grapevines.
- Grand River Valley: The Grand River Valley AVA includes portions of the Lake, Geauga, and Ashtabula counties of northeastern Ohio.
- Ohio River Valley: Wine has been produced in this AVA since 1823. It is the second-largest wine appellation of origin in the United States with 16,640,000 acres in portions of the states of Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and West Virginia. It is second only to the Upper Mississippi Valley.
- Loramie Creek: The Loramie Creek AVA is bordered by Loramie and Tuttle Creeks as well as state Route 47 in Shelby County.
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Explore Ohio’s seven wine trails
The Ohio Wine Producers Association lists seven wine trails, each covering a certain region of the state. They are:
- Appalachian Wine Trail: According to the wine producers group, the region’s deep unglaciated soils create “very favorable microclimates to ripen grapes,” which are then made into distinctive wines in the tradition of the artists who made the pottery, glasswork, basketry and furniture “for which the foothills of eastern Ohio continue to be known.”
- Canal Country Wine Trail: Dotted throughout the region opened to settlement by the Ohio and Erie Canal are some of the state’s “most charming” wineries, according to the wine producers. “Remnants of the Canal are preserved in an area rich in history, beautiful scenery, unique cultures, natural resources and leisure activity options.”
- Capital City Wine Trail: With each winery located a short drive from Columbus, the wine producers association says it is possible to visit two or three in a day and explore the unique communities that surround them.
- Ohio River Valley Wine Trail: This trail celebrates Ohio wines’ rise to prominence, not once but twice. In the 1800s, Nicholas Longworth planted vines imported from Europe on hundreds of acres overlooking the Ohio River, and discovered a native variety that produced an excellent sparkling wine. By the mid-1800s, his wines were celebrated across the country and Europe, but vine disease and the Civil War ended his run. In the 1970s, the region made a comeback with the support of research from Ohio State University.
- Lake Erie Shores & Islands Wine Trail: Throughout this ‘cool climate’ growing district, historic vineyards and wine families who have farmed them for generations are complemented by new plantings of Rieslings and chardonnays established by entrepreneurs. Numerous soil types, deposited by years of glacial movements, provide fertile ground for great viticulture, new and old.
- Vines & Wines Wine Trail: Along the south shore of Lake Erie, through the valley created by the Grand River, this tiny parcel of land in Northeast Ohio is home to well over half of the wine grape acreage in the state. It boasts more wineries per square mile than in any other region.
- V.I.N.O. Wine Trail: The “Vintners in Northwest Ohio” represents an eclectic group of family wineries. They are just a short drive from Toledo and neighboring communities in Michigan and Indiana.
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Visit a wine festival
The Vintage Ohio Wine Festival in Kirtland on Aug. 2 and 3 bills itself as the “premier food and wine event of the year.” It offers a wide selection of Ohio wines, as well as entertainment, artisans and shopping.
But it is far from the only festival happening around the state. Others include the Island Wine Festival in June and the V.I.N.O Wine Festival in October. For a full list, visit the Ohio Wine Producers Association events page.
Sample a new Ohio wine, or attend a tasting at a new winery
Expand your horizons by sampling a new wine, or your favorite style from a new winery in Ohio.
For past Ohio Wine Months, Ohio Magazine has offered a selection of new wines to try, including 7 Ohio wineries to visit in 2023 and 6 Ohio wines to try in 2022.
Try an award-winning wine
The Ohio Grape Industries Committee has a long list of Ohio wineries that took home medals from the 2024 San Francisco Chronicle Wine Competition, which it calls “the most prestigious in North America.” More than 50 judges, representing various North American wine regions, evaluated over 5,500 wines from nearly 1,000 wineries for the competition.
The 2023 Ohio Wine Competition, held in May, was the largest one yet with 432 entries, the group says. Hanover Winery’s Marquette won Overall Best of Show and Best of Ohio. For the full list of winners, click here.
Find an Ohio winery near you
The state has 320 wineries and 21 grape juice, jam, and jelly producers, according to the Ohio tourism association. If you’re looking for one near you, the Ohio Grape Industries Committee offers a search engine by address or ZIP code.
Ohio
Ohio Governor Mike DeWine vetoes child work bill
OHIO (WJW) — Governor Mike DeWine is standing by his veto of Senate Bill 50, which would’ve permitted 14 and 15-year-olds to work after 7 p.m.
“I did not see a compelling need, frankly, to change that,” he said. “It is pretty much the law in this country at 7 o’clock, so this would be a rather dramatic change in the law.”
The proposed law would have extended the work window for teenagers until 9 p.m. year-round, including school nights, with parental permission.
State Representative Mark Johnson believes it would’ve been good for teenagers.
“There’s so much responsibility to be learned in a work environment,” he said. “We’re raising an entire generation that goes through high school and goes through college even without a lick of work environment experience.”
Johnson said “guardrails” are already in place to prevent students from overworking.
Teenagers must have a work permit signed by both the school administrator and a parent or guardian, which can be revoked if their grades fall.
“They can only work three hours a day and a total of 18 hours a week,” Johnson said.
The Ohio Restaurant and Hospitality Alliance came out in support of it, arguing that it would help businesses facing staffing shortages in retail and the food service industry.
“Early work changed my life. I started working, actually, at the age of 14, and you know that experience taught me customer service, communication skills and responsibility,” said Donovan O’Neil, State Director of Americans for Prosperity Ohio.
But not everyone agrees, and some think the change could become a slippery slope that infringes upon child labor laws.
“We have been fighting for child labor laws for so long. Why are we changing stuff? I feel like this is regressing backwards,” said Jamie Shumaker, Executive Director of AFL-CIO Central Ohio.
Shumaker believes kids should focus on their education and supports the veto.
“They’re in school, they play sports, they have homework. I know how exhausting it is,” she said.
Despite the veto, the law remains in play, with lawmakers deciding their next move.
Rep. Johnson said both a legislative override and a compromise of 8 p.m. are being considered.
A legislative override would have to start in the Ohio Senate and must be supported by the House.
That action could take months.
Johnson said if the Senate moves forward, they have the votes in the House to support it.
Ohio
Rain, snow, wind on the way for Northeast Ohio
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Northeast Ohio is staring down an active stretch of December weather, with several rounds of rain, snow and strong winds expected to sweep through the region this week.
Before the mess arrives, Monday offers a quiet but frigid calm before the storms. High pressure over the Great Lakes will keep conditions mostly dry, though temperatures will lag well below normal and be stuck in the 20s with wind chills in the teens.
Overnight lows will fall into the teens and even upper single digits, according to the National Weather Service in Cleveland.
Snow showers could return as early as Tuesday as a weak clipper system slips by to the north and sends a warm front across the region. Any accumulation looks minimal, but it’s the opening act for a stronger system arriving Tuesday night into Wednesday.
Midweek storm: Rain and snow, with wind
The midweek storm will start as snow before warmer air is pulled into Northeast Ohio and changes over to rain for most of the area by Wednesday morning.
Rain will continue throughout the afternoon as temperatures rise to near 40 degrees. A strong low-level jet could push wind gusts to 40 to 45 mph, creating a wet and windy day across the region.
A cold front trailing the system will sweep through later Wednesday, flipping rain back to snow and setting up lake-effect chances into Wednesday night and Thursday. Light accumulations are possible across the region, with a better shot at 1 to 2 inches in the primary snowbelt east of Cleveland.
Snow may linger into Thursday, especially in the snowbelt where lake-enhanced bands could persist, before high pressure briefly returns Thursday night.
Another round of snow possible Friday
Forecast models show another low-pressure system sliding through the Great Lakes on Friday, bringing a fresh chance for widespread light snow and reinforcing the cold air already in place.
While snowfall amounts remain uncertain, it marks the start of another potentially messy stretch heading into the weekend.
Lake-effect machine may kick back on this weekend
Behind Friday’s system, colder air spilling over Lake Erie may reignite lake-effect snow Saturday and Sunday. The exact placement and intensity of the bands are still uncertain — models vary widely — but traditional snowbelt areas east of Cleveland have the best shot at accumulating snow.
Forecasters say some clues even hint at the potential for more significant lake-effect totals, if the colder pattern sets in.
Temperatures will stay below normal through the weekend, keeping the wintry pattern firmly in place as December continues.
Ohio
Ohio man sent meth through bank’s drive-thru air tube: Police
WOODSFIELD, Ohio (WTVG) – An Ohio man accidentally sent methamphetamine through a bank’s drive-thru air tube system, authorities said.
Investigators said Jason Smith, 46, unknowingly sent the drugs in a baggie through the air tube during a transaction on Dec. 3.
Ohio Department of Natural Resource Officers helped track him down after he left the bank, according to the sheriff’s office in Monroe County, Ohio. Deputies said they found additional suspected drugs and drug-related items in his truck.
Smith was arrested and transported to the Monroe County, Ohio jail.
“Illegal drugs don’t belong in bank drive-thrus — but they can be turned in at the Sheriff’s Office. No charges, no handcuffs, just help,“ Monroe County Sheriff Derek Norman said. ”We’d much rather safely take them off the street than see another unexpected ‘deposit.’”
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