Barnett Vineyards | Napa Valley

Barnett Vineyards  Napa Valley - Spring Mountain District, Napa Valley winery and vineyard
Spring Mountain District, Napa Valley

Barnett Vineyards

A small family estate at 2,000 feet on Spring Mountain, producing age-worthy Cabernet Sauvignon from vines planted in 1983 and a flagship single-block Rattlesnake Hill Cabernet prized by collectors.

Spring Mountain District2,000 Feet ElevationCabernet SauvignonRattlesnake HillFamily Estate

Barnett Vineyards is a small, family-owned estate on the upper reaches of Spring Mountain, operating with the kind of focused independence that defines the best small Napa producers. Hal and Fiona Barnett planted their estate in 1983 and bonded the winery in 1989, becoming among the earlier entrants to what would become the Spring Mountain District AVA. The estate sits at 2,000 feet, in the band of volcanic soils and cool mountain climate that produces Cabernet Sauvignon with the structure and longevity that distinguish mountain Napa from the valley floor.

The Barnett Family and Their Mountain

Hal and Fiona Barnett were not wine industry veterans when they began planting their Spring Mountain estate in 1983. Their interest was in the land and in the possibility of growing something genuine from it, rather than in entering the wine business as a career move. This orientation has shaped the winery’s character ever since.

The planting was deliberate: Cabernet Sauvignon as the primary variety, with Merlot and Cabernet Franc added for blending material and to take advantage of the slightly cooler blocks where the Bordeaux blending varieties ripen more comfortably than the dominant Cabernet. The estate was bonded for winemaking in 1989, six years after the first planting, following enough time to understand how the different blocks performed and what the mountain wanted to produce.

The family operation has remained genuinely small. Production is limited by the estate acreage and by the decision to keep Barnett as a winery that reflects its specific mountain location rather than expanding sourcing to achieve volume. This commitment to estate focus is one of the defining characteristics of the producer and a major reason the wines have maintained collector interest over more than three decades.

Rattlesnake Hill is a single-block estate Cabernet Sauvignon produced from the most extreme section of the Barnett property, where thin volcanic soils and maximum slope create the highest-concentration fruit on the mountain.

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Spring Mountain at 2,000 Feet: The Terroir

The Barnett estate sits at 2,000 feet on Spring Mountain, placing it in the upper tier of Spring Mountain District elevations. At this height, the volcanic soils are thin and rocky, drainage is rapid, and the vine stress that produces concentrated, small-berry fruit is maximized.

Spring Mountain soils are a mosaic of ancient volcanic deposits: some blocks sit on fractured volcanic rock with minimal topsoil, while others have slightly deeper deposits of clay and volcanic ash. The variation from block to block is significant enough that the Barnetts manage each section differently based on its soil composition and sun exposure.

The diurnal temperature swing at 2,000 feet on Spring Mountain regularly exceeds 40 degrees Fahrenheit during harvest season, with warm afternoons giving way to cold nights that preserve natural acidity and slow the final stages of ripening. This extended hang time is what allows Cabernet Sauvignon to develop full phenolic ripeness without losing the acidity structure that makes mountain Cabernet capable of aging.

The single-block Rattlesnake Hill section represents the most extreme expression of these conditions: thin soils on a steep slope with high sun exposure and maximum vine stress. The berries produced there are tiny, with thick skins and an intensity of flavor that makes the resulting wine qualitatively different from even the best estate Cabernet blocks.

The Wines: Estate Cabernet and Rattlesnake Hill

Barnett Vineyards produces a focused portfolio of estate wines led by Cabernet Sauvignon, with Merlot and small amounts of other estate varieties completing the range.

The Spring Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon is assembled from the best estate blocks each vintage, excluding the fruit reserved for Rattlesnake Hill. It shows the signature of the mountain: firm, structured tannins, dark fruit in the blackberry and cassis range, herbal and iron-mineral notes from the volcanic soils, and the kind of structural backbone that requires at minimum five to seven years of cellaring before it begins to open up.

Rattlesnake Hill is the flagship expression: a single-block Cabernet Sauvignon from the most stressed and concentrated section of the estate. Production is small, typically just a few hundred cases in vintages where the block delivers the quality the name demands. In off years or difficult growing seasons, the fruit is folded into the estate Cabernet rather than released separately. When Rattlesnake Hill does appear, it is one of the most sought-after small-production Spring Mountain wines available, with critics and collectors regularly noting 95-point or higher scores.

Merlot from the estate provides a counterpoint to the Cabernet-dominated portfolio: more plush, more immediately accessible in youth, and useful both as a standalone wine and as a blending component in vintages where the estate Cabernet benefits from softening.

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Food Pairing: Small-Production Mountain Cabernet

Barnett estate Cabernet Sauvignon and Rattlesnake Hill share the fundamental characteristics of Spring Mountain mountain wines: high tannin, elevated natural acidity, and deep concentration of dark fruit. These characteristics dictate the appropriate food pairings with precision.

High-tannin wines need protein to soften. The biochemistry is direct: tannins are astringent polyphenols that bond to proteins. When food protein is present, the tannins bind to it instead of to your palate, reducing the drying sensation and allowing the fruit and complexity of the wine to come forward. For Barnett Cabernet, the ideal protein source is well-marbled red meat: a ribeye with a fat cap intact, a short rib braised low and slow until the collagen breaks down, or a lamb shoulder that has been cooking for hours in red wine.

The herbal and iron-mineral character of Spring Mountain Cabernet creates an additional pairing dimension. Herb-forward preparations work particularly well: a rack of lamb with a Dijon and herb crust, rosemary-studded leg of lamb with roasted root vegetables, or a beef tenderloin with a thyme and garlic compound butter. The herbs in the food echo the herbal quality in the wine and create a sense of harmony rather than competition.

For Rattlesnake Hill specifically, where the concentration is at its maximum, food with genuine richness and weight is essential. This is not a wine for light meals. A bone-in prime rib or a venison stew with dark fruit reduction are appropriate partners for the intensity the wine delivers.

Visiting Barnett Vineyards

Barnett Vineyards is located at 4070 Spring Mountain Road in St. Helena, near the cluster of Spring Mountain wineries that occupy the upper reaches of this mountainside appellation. The road climbs steeply from the valley floor; the estate is accessible by car, though the drive requires attention on the narrow, winding mountain road.

Tastings are by appointment and reflect the small, family-owned character of the operation. Visits typically include access to estate grounds and a focused tasting of current releases and, when available, older vintages that demonstrate how the wines develop. The intimacy of the experience is part of the draw: Barnett does not have the visitor infrastructure of larger Napa estates, but what it offers is access to wines and a setting that few visitors ever find.

For collectors already familiar with Spring Mountain Cabernet and looking for small-production alternatives to the better-known names on the mountain, Barnett Vineyards is an essential stop.

Address
4070 Spring Mountain Rd, St. Helena, CA 94574
Phone
(707) 963-7075
Tasting
By appointment only
AVA
Spring Mountain District, Napa Valley
Known For
Rattlesnake Hill single-block Cabernet, estate Spring Mountain Cabernet, small family operation since 1989
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Barnett Vineyards: Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Barnett Vineyards located?
Barnett Vineyards is at 4070 Spring Mountain Road in St. Helena, California 94574, in the Spring Mountain District AVA. The estate sits at approximately 2,000 feet elevation on the upper reaches of Spring Mountain.
When was Barnett Vineyards founded?
Hal and Fiona Barnett planted the Spring Mountain estate in 1983 and bonded the winery in 1989. The family operation has remained independently owned and focused on estate production since its founding.
What is Rattlesnake Hill?
Rattlesnake Hill is the flagship single-block Cabernet Sauvignon at Barnett Vineyards, produced from the most stressed and concentrated section of the estate. The block sits on thin volcanic soils on a steep slope with maximum sun exposure. Production is small, typically a few hundred cases, and the wine consistently receives 95-point or higher critical scores. In difficult vintages, the fruit is blended into the estate Cabernet rather than released separately.
What wines does Barnett Vineyards produce?
Barnett Vineyards produces Spring Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon, Rattlesnake Hill single-block Cabernet Sauvignon, and Merlot, all from estate fruit. The Cabernet Sauvignon and Rattlesnake Hill are the flagship wines and the primary focus of the portfolio.
What AVA is Barnett Vineyards in?
Barnett Vineyards is in the Spring Mountain District AVA, a mountain appellation on the western Mayacamas range above St. Helena in Napa Valley. The AVA is characterized by volcanic soils, elevations above 1,000 feet, and the production of structured, age-worthy Cabernet Sauvignon.
How long should I age Barnett Vineyards Cabernet?
Barnett Spring Mountain Cabernet Sauvignon benefits from a minimum of five to seven years of cellaring, and Rattlesnake Hill can develop well for 15 years or more in a proper cellar. Young vintages are firm and structured; with age, the tannins integrate and the complexity of the mountain fruit emerges.
Can I visit Barnett Vineyards?
Yes, but visits are by appointment only. Barnett is a small family estate and does not accommodate walk-in visitors. Appointments typically include a tasting of current releases and occasionally older library wines. Contact the winery directly to schedule a visit.
What food pairs with Barnett Vineyards Cabernet Sauvignon?
Barnett Spring Mountain Cabernet is high in tannin and acidity, making it ideal with protein-rich, fatty red meat preparations. Dry-aged ribeye, braised short rib, rack of lamb with herb crust, and rosemary-rubbed leg of lamb all work well. Aged hard cheeses are also good partners for the wine’s firm structure.