Cellar Organisation

The place on the web to chat about wine, Australian wines, or any other wines for that matter
Post Reply
User avatar
Diddy
Posts: 550
Joined: Tue Nov 19, 2013 4:35 pm
Location: Melbourne

Cellar Organisation

Post by Diddy »

Hi all,

For those of you with offsite storage (or keep your wines stored in boxes), how do you go about organising your collection?

Do you sort the bottles into boxes by varietal or by drinking window (or some other measure)?

I have locker style storage and with everything stacked vertically in boxes I'm trying to find the best way to keep things well organised and accessible.

What works best for you?
Last edited by Diddy on Tue Apr 29, 2014 5:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.

rossmckay
Posts: 220
Joined: Thu May 03, 2012 7:22 am
Contact:

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by rossmckay »

Labels on the outside of boxes with the shorter sampling dates at the front. I only go there once a year so half an hour sorting does the trick
http://vinsiders.com.au

maybs
Posts: 726
Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2014 12:00 pm
Location: Sydney

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by maybs »

I've been trying to work out how I am going to approach this myself. At the moment it have tried to keep longer term cellar ing options together but in the interest of space this hasn't always worked, and they haven't all ended up down the back, which is a pain. I need to reorganize but this is also a pain in a smallish crawl space.

Oh well, first world problem :D
You can find me on Instagram at oz_oenophile
Follow for my little wine journey.

sjw_11
Site Admin
Posts: 1938
Joined: Tue Mar 29, 2011 5:10 pm
Location: London

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by sjw_11 »

I have often considered an organisation system without success... recently I moved my cellar from a 60dozen space which was effectively full to a 120 dozen space which gives some room to move... I made SOME effort to organise (e.g. all the rockford stuff is now together) but even just with checking the inventory it took like 2 hours to move so its still pretty much random! But it doesnt help I have always been quite happy to buy just 1 or 2 odd bottles and throw them in the cellar, so I probably have 6 or 7 boxes of "mixed nuts" :P

cellar (small).jpg
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
------------------------------------
Sam

User avatar
rens
Posts: 1425
Joined: Thu May 14, 2009 7:52 pm

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by rens »

I have 27 plastic cases that stack together into a cube (1m x 1m x 1m). Each case holds between 14 and 17 bottles lying down depending on the bottle type. Each case is numbered 1-27. I use cellar tracker to track inventory and every year at stocktake I move a few around, but the general rule is the stuff to be drunk last (needing 10-15 years of cellaring) goes into plastic cases numbered 19-27, and the earlier drinking stuff into cases 1-9 and the left overs in the remaining 9.
never underestimate the predictability of stupidity

Teisto
Posts: 286
Joined: Thu May 27, 2010 12:19 pm

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by Teisto »

Whilst not a great system it works for me.

I have 3 cabinets of which each cabinet is divided into 3 sections and can hold 8 cases per section.

Each of the cases is numbered and in my spreadsheet I have a layout of where each case resides by cabinet and section (top, middle, bottom) and then the contents of each case by producer, grape type and vintage.

Not sorted by drinking window so when I need to pull stuff out it can be time consuming grabbing a bottle from here and there. I then try to top that case up with new incoming wine or consolidate once or twice a year - the wife often rings to see if I am alive given how long I spend there at times.

User avatar
Diddy
Posts: 550
Joined: Tue Nov 19, 2013 4:35 pm
Location: Melbourne

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by Diddy »

Teisto wrote:the wife often rings to see if I am alive given how long I spend there at times.


Haha - been there done that many times before!

It probably doesn't help that my storage facility is surrounded by massage parlours :lol:

User avatar
odyssey
Posts: 658
Joined: Fri Dec 21, 2007 6:06 pm
Location: Sydney

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by odyssey »

Teisto wrote:Whilst not a great system it works for me.

I have 3 cabinets of which each cabinet is divided into 3 sections and can hold 8 cases per section.

Each of the cases is numbered and in my spreadsheet I have a layout of where each case resides by cabinet and section (top, middle, bottom) and then the contents of each case by producer, grape type and vintage.

Not sorted by drinking window so when I need to pull stuff out it can be time consuming grabbing a bottle from here and there. I then try to top that case up with new incoming wine or consolidate once or twice a year - the wife often rings to see if I am alive given how long I spend there at times.


This sounds like my system although I usually can't be bothered moving stuff around so end up keeping drinkable wines near the top/front (or drinking what is there anyay...) or just drinking what is on hand in the wine fridge.... And the wife indeed does wonder where I have gone at times! :D

User avatar
Diddy
Posts: 550
Joined: Tue Nov 19, 2013 4:35 pm
Location: Melbourne

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by Diddy »

Has anyone here had a go at printing out barcode labels from CellarTracker?

You can pick up a label printer from Officeworks for less than $100 along with a USB barcode scanner from Ebay for about $30, which could make for a pretty cost effective way of tracking things...? :idea: :?:

User avatar
Andrew Jordan
Posts: 775
Joined: Wed May 05, 2004 11:53 am
Location: Sydney

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by Andrew Jordan »

Diddy wrote:Has anyone here had a go at printing out barcode labels from CellarTracker?

You can pick up a label printer from Officeworks for less than $100 along with a USB barcode scanner from Ebay for about $30, which could make for a pretty cost effective way of tracking things...? :idea: :?:


Yes got half way through doing this. Have purchased the Dymo printer and printed off 1,500+ labels and stuck these to all the bottles in my cellar (massive job! :shock: ). Have not got around to purchasing the USB barcode scanner but need to do this. I must admit, the label on the back of the bottle is a good talking point over dinner, especially if it is a bottle you purchased many years ago as it records purchase date, place of purchase, price, etc.

In regards to Cellar Organisation, I am fortunate to have a converted space under the house to cellar my wine. Find it easy to store by varietal by vintage order. Most bottles are in racking which makes access a little bit easier.

Image

Image
Cheers
AJ

Cabernet is ... and will always be ... KING!

maybs
Posts: 726
Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2014 12:00 pm
Location: Sydney

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by maybs »

So jealous of all that space Andrew!
You can find me on Instagram at oz_oenophile
Follow for my little wine journey.

Chuck
Posts: 1342
Joined: Sat Sep 13, 2003 3:06 pm
Location: Sydney

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by Chuck »

Have tried many times to organise the chaos that is my cellar. But what do you do with an empty slot after taking out a bottle? Move other bottles in a Rubic's cube manner to fill the void? There is an upside when discovering a forgotten bottle like a 1998 Mildara Coonawarra Cabernet last night.

Carl
Your worst game of golf is better than your best day at work

Andy.L
Posts: 46
Joined: Fri Jul 01, 2011 11:51 am

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by Andy.L »

Hey Andrew,

love the idea of wines behind locked bars :wink: ... guess they are not getting paroled any time soon for good behaviour 8)

User avatar
Andrew Jordan
Posts: 775
Joined: Wed May 05, 2004 11:53 am
Location: Sydney

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by Andrew Jordan »

maybs wrote:So jealous of all that space Andrew!


You can never have enough space! :D :D
Cheers
AJ

Cabernet is ... and will always be ... KING!

User avatar
Andrew Jordan
Posts: 775
Joined: Wed May 05, 2004 11:53 am
Location: Sydney

Re: Cellar Organisation

Post by Andrew Jordan »

Andy.L wrote:Hey Andrew,

love the idea of wines behind locked bars :wink: ... guess they are not getting paroled any time soon for good behaviour 8)


Nick named the "Grange Cage". Very useful for when you go down to find a bottle when you have already had a few - it is good insurance so you don't wake up the next morning and find out that you have just drunk your only bottle of 1991 Grange! :shock:
Cheers
AJ

Cabernet is ... and will always be ... KING!

Post Reply