I’ll go first. I have 32 vintages in the cellar with an average across the cellar of 2007.5.
Tom
I’ll go first. I have 32 vintages in the cellar with an average across the cellar of 2007.5.
Tom
89 vintages, average 1990.4
Is there a mic drop emoji?
Tom
45 vintages with an average of 2004.
12 vintages, 2010.8 average.
it is difficult for me to answer using my files;
after 1900 I have every year except 1901 and 1910 so it makes 113 years.
before 1901 I have around 30 years, so probably I have 143 years in total in cellar.
Average year is nearly impossible to calculate, but I would say it is around 1970 / 1975. But I could be wrong.
62 Vintages with average vintage 1997.3.
But I haven’t updated my CT with some recent purchases, so that might be a bit off.
37 vintages, 2008.6 mean, 1999 median, 2012 mode. (for the stats geeks)
21 vintages, avg 2012.6
80 vintages, avg 2003. Got skewed by 2015 Riesling purchases.
46 vintages 2005 ave.
JD
22 vintages. 2011 avg. bought heavy in 2013 California wines so skews it a bit
31 vintages, average 2006. Huge buying year of '10 Brunello brings it up a bit.
12, 2012
Awesome! 56/2002 for me.
There are some impressive numbers above. 24 and 2009.9.
are these weighted?
51, 2005
Lots of people seem to be embarrassed by the avg vintage and are adding disclaimers. Why? Own it. It makes sense to have more recent vintage wines unless you have stopped buying new wine altogether.
33 vintages (1955-2015), avg 2007, +107 nv