Business & Tech

Peconic Bay Winery Manager: Business Not For Sale — Yet

But the possibility of a sale still exists down the line, the business' general manager has said since April.

Despite published media reports to the contrary, James Silver, general manager for the Peconic Bay Winery, said Monday that the business is not for sale — yet.

"We still haven’t placed it up for sale. It’s not listed at all. In fact, lately we’ve been talking about not selling it at all," Silver said Monday.

Everything, he said, is still in the talking stages, with no clear course of action set. "What we do remains to be seen," he said.

Silver said the future of the winery is still up in the air at this point. "It is not listed yet," he said. But he added that whiie it "probably" could be, the outcome hasn't been decided yet.

In April, Silver told Patch that sale of the Cutchogue winery was one possibility, down the road, but that the business was not yet on the market.

With questions swirling regarding the winery's future, Silver addressed the issue in April: "People really want to know what's going to happen," he said. "Honestly, I don't know. We don't have any plans. We are not for sale."

However, Silver said at that time, the option of a sale was not off the table. "The fact of the matter is if someone came along with an offer, we're not going to look askance. We are not actively trying to sell the winery, but we don't have illusions -- we are looking for something to do with the property. What that is -- if it continues to be a winery, or if there's a transfer of ownership, or development of the property, or a lease situation -- all of of those things are possible. But all of those things take years."

Knowing how long any option would take, Silver said the main objective was to keep the property "looking beautiful" and ensure that it not become run-down and an eyesore. "Even though it's not a public tasting room anymore -- it's a private farm with a private winery -- it's going to be maintained one hundred percent."

And, he added, "It's not going to become a K-mart. It's going to be a farm and a winery for a long time."

This season, Silver said, the property was "repurposed," with the vineyard outsourced to Lieb Cellars and Premium Wine Group -- the two recently merged -- in Mattituck.

Russell Hearn, director of winemaking and production at both, hired Bill Ackerman to run one vineyard and Steve Mudd, of Mudd Vineyards, to run the other, Silver said. 

"The agreement is that they would care for the property and keep it looking very attractive," Silver said. "We don't want to let it go. There's no cash transaction. They get the fruit, and the arrangement has no end date."

Only a letter of intent seals the deal, Silver said. 

Meanwhile, Silver added, the Peconic Bay Winery will continue to produce, with Greg Cove at the helm. "We have two years' worth of inventory," Silver said.

The tasting room in Cutchogue, however, will not open this year, Silver said. "It probably won't open ever again."

In January, Peconic Bay Winery moved its tasting room from Route 25 in Cutchogue to a newer facility at Empire State Cellars in the Tanger Mall complex in Riverhead.

“There is a massive crush of people coming through the Riverhead store all of the time now, the hours are much longer, and there is a lot more parking — we’ll reach a lot more people this way,” Silver said at the time. “And to be honest, the agritourism aspect we were dealing with in Cutchogue is not nearly as profitable as you would imagine it would be and was not beneficial to the branding of our wine.”

Office and administrative work, fermentation, bottling and storage of wine will also continue at the Cutchogue location, which opened in 1979 and has been owned by Ursula and Paul Lowerre since 1999. 

Empire State Cellars opened at the Tanger Outlet Mall in the fall of 2011, with a tasting room and a retail store featuring over 800 wine, beer, and spirits products made exclusively in New York State. ESC-X is the export arm of Empire State Cellars, currently shipping products from ten New York wineries, including Peconic Bay, to the New York State Wine Outlet in Shanghai, China.

"Empire State Cellars is a very successful business manager for us," Silver said. He added that Tanger was the perfect location for a tasting room and said the site has become a one-stop destination for tourism information, as well.

Some other parcels owned by the winery, Silver added in April, were on the market.
 


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