Gil Nickel was a visionary of the Napa Valley wine industry and
the proprietor of Far Niente winery. He was also a gifted nurseryman,
champion vintage auto racer, avid motorcyclist and guided missile
analyst. While his passions were many, his friends and longtime
associates agree that Gil was driven more by his ideals, loyalties,
friendships and sense of humor, than his business interests. In the
Fall of 2003, Gil passed away after a courageous battle against
melanoma.
Born
Harold Gilliland Nickel in 1939 in Muskogee, OK, Gil studied Physics
and Math at Oklahoma State University and graduated in 1961. After
college, he served with the Oklahoma Air National Guard and achieved a
service ribbon for his tour of duty in Vietnam. At the conclusion of
active duty, Gil relocated to Southern California, where he worked as a
guided missile analyst at the United States Navy laboratory in Corona,
CA.
Eventually, Gil returned home to Oklahoma to join
his father, Harold, and older brother, John, in managing the family’s
Greenleaf Nursery Company, which was founded by Harold Nickel in 1945
as a small retail operation. Together, the brothers grew the nursery
from its small-company roots to the second largest, family owned
wholesale nursery in the United States, a position it continues to hold
today.
In 1976, Gil handed over the day-to-day
management of Greenleaf to his brother, and returned to California to
pursue his dream of making world-class wine. Although it was only seven
years earlier, at the age of 30, when he enjoyed his first taste of
wine, Gil was driven by his passion to establish a Napa Valley wine
estate. In 1979, after studying enology at the University of California
Davis, making wine at home, and conducting extensive research into the
state’s vineyards and wine regions, Gil found the old Far Niente winery
in Oakville, abandoned for 60 years and in disrepair. Three years
later, after a meticulous restoration and excavating what would become
the first new wine caves
to be built in North America in the 20th century, Far Niente crushed
its first harvest in more than six decades. Gil’s work was rewarded
with the placement of the property on the National Register of Historic
Places.
Far
Niente became the place Gil called home, where, with his wife, Beth, he
brought together the many loves of his life. He created the
extraordinary gardens
that surround the winery, which, among many special plantings, hold the
largest collection of Southern azaleas in California and perhaps
throughout the West Coast. He constructed a carriage house to showcase
his classic car collection, which he proudly displayed for visitors and
generously shared with friends. Far Niente’s legendary jewel-box
beauty, stunning gardens, gracious hospitality, sophisticated style and
exceptional quality at every level remain the hallmarks of Gil’s legacy.
A
trusted friend and neighbor, Gil encouraged his fellow vintners never
to underestimate their value and ability to enhance the image of the
Napa Valley wine industry. Under his leadership, Far Niente became the
first to create a specially packaged, custom lot for the 1983 Napa
Valley Wine Auction. The lot ranked number one at the auction that
year, and ultimately changed the course of charity wine auctions
worldwide.
With the success of Far Niente firmly
entrenched, new winery pursuits followed. In 1992, Gil and his
partners, Dirk Hampson and Larry Maguire, created Dolce, North
America’s only winery committed exclusively to producing a single, late
harvest wine. In 1997, intrigued by the challenge of making
single-vineyard wines, Gil led his partners toward creating a
completely new winery, devoted to 100 percent varietal,
vineyard-designated wines. The first wines from Nickel & Nickel
were released in 2000, and following a two-year program of construction
and historic restoration, the Nickel & Nickel winery opened to the
public in July 2003. The efforts of Gil and his partners to restore the
1880s Queen Anne-style John C. Sullenger home at Nickel & Nickel
were recognized by Napa County Landmarks, who named Gil
“Preservationist of the Year” at its annual awards ceremony in
September 2003.
Rarely one to idle, Gil understood
the value of living a full life, and pursued many other interests
beyond the wineries. He enjoyed traveling and counted as friends people
from all walks of life in many parts of the world. He was legendary for
his ability to tell a story or quip an Oklahoma one-liner. An active
collector of vintage cars, Gil held a healthy respect for driving fast
– on the racetrack – and spent nearly two decades competing in and
winning vintage car races around the world. In fact, Gil won several
historic racing series in the U.S., and became, in 1995, the first
American to win the European FIA Historic Sports Car Championship. He
also satisfied his lust for the open road on countless motorcycle
expeditions, logging a quarter-million miles on his BMW bikes, often
with Beth as his passenger.
Gil
passed away in October 2003, leaving his legacy firmly in place with
longtime partners Larry Maguire and Dirk Hampson. They are joined by
Gil's nephew Erik, wife Beth, and son Jeremy, as they lead Far Niente,
Dolce and Nickel & Nickel to the successful future for which Gil
planted the seeds so many years ago.