Photo: wallyg, Flickr
Who doesn't love a nice, dry Cabernet? As if to a flame, moths have been flocking in great number to the grape vineyards in Napa, Sonoma, and Salano and feasting on the young spring crops -- causing the wine industry a major headache. The California Department of Agriculture has quarantined 162 square miles in an effort to isolate the moth larvae.
It's not just any moth, either: This is EGVM, or Lobesia botrana, which up until now has been found in Asia, Europe, Africa, and South America, but never in North America. The pest was first spotted in Oakville, Calif., last September, and since then two pockets of infestation have been identified -- both in the heart of wine country.



The question is, would you really go all the way to the Napa Valley wine country and not taste wine?










