Fall Bright
10110 Hyatt Hill, Dundee,
NY 14837 (near Wayne) 607-292-3995 Coordinates:
42.490863, -77.117778
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Free catalog, mail order of supplies but not grapes and juices. GRAPE CROP OUTLOOK 2011 Home Winemaking Seminar 20112011 Crop Update A Typical Year in the Vineyard The Way We Manage Our Vineyards to Maximize Quality & Notes Pertinent to the 2011 Harvest
Crop Update The 2010-2011 winter was long, dreary and monotonously cold though, thankfully, not brutally cold. Bud check for primary bud mortality through the winter ranged from 7% for the hardier Aurore to 33% in the Muscat Ottonel. The winter gave way to a rather cool wet spring that hampered spring vineyard equipment activities for fear of rutting and compacting vineyard soils, thankfully we had completed our trellis repair work and applied an under the trellis combination of Roundup and Diuron herbicide in November of 2010. That herbicide application killed the roots of actively growing weeds and put a pre-emergent barrier down that suppressed most weed growth well into early June of 2011. In early May we had dried out enough to apply under-trellis follow-up herbicide applications which pretty much eliminated most under the row weed competition for the majority of the growing season. This was a very fortunate situation. Most of you are well aware of the hot dry growing season that we have recently experienced until the meager bits of rainfall and cooler temperatures we’ve experienced in the last week or so. The vines got off to a robust start with all the spring moisture. With the lack of weed competition our vines never skipped a beat and continued normal growth through the prolonged hot dry spell with the exception of a few small spots which were eroded knoll situations. There have been reports of serious drought stress in several Finger Lakes vineyards. If there was a benefit to the hot dry spell, it would have been reduced disease pressure, allowing us to eliminate a couple of pesticide applications and still maintain clean vines. The initiation of veraision in our vineyards was first observed in the variety Leon Millot on 28-July-11, perhaps as early a date as I can remember. As of the 8th of August we were ~ 16 GDD ahead of the long term average and 4 GDD behind the 2010 season on that date. With a bunch of warmish days, cool nights, a bit of moisture now and then and no calamities for the next 10-11 weeks, the potential exists for another stellar year for winemakers. In our lives 2 ½ months is but a mere blip but I can assure you that for farmers with a high potential crop in the balance, it can be a drawn-out affair of expectations - fraught with uncertainty, nervousness and worry. As we should all know, after this world-wide, catastrophically eventful year, the course of events can be dramatically changed in a matter of seconds. We can hope, cross our fingers and say a few prayers but we won’t know the outcome until sometime in late October. A Year in the Vineyard – an outline In November of 1973 after my first 22 months in the vineyard we were visited by friends and after taking them on a brief tour of the area I remember one of them saying “Wow! This must be the life! A month of picking grapes and all you have to do is kick back and wait for the next crop.” I still shake my head – he didn’t have a clue. For practical purposes the fiscal year in our vineyard is from Nov-1 to Oct-31 and for everyone out there I’d like to give you an idea of what a typical year is in the vineyard business is like. After catching your breath from the clean-up of the harvest just completed it might go something like this -
Managing Our Vineyards to Maximize Quality We have committed our entire 21 acres and 30 varieties to be grown for the amateur winemaker and a few small premium wineries. We are not a highly mechanized operation – no mechanical pruning or hedging and little mechanical harvesting - each vine in every manual operation is given individual attention (we have 15,172 vine spaces). We have tried to give each variety the spacing, pruning and training methods we feel are best suited for them. As a result we have 5 row spacings, 5 vine spacings and are experimenting with 2 wider vine spacings for a very vigorous variety. We use 8 different training systems one of which is a proprietary system we use for Riesling and gewürztraminer. A 2 acre block of Riesling is a replicated planting with 4 clones and 5 different rootstocks, Chardonnay is on 3 different rootstocks. We are not against removing a variety, adding a variety or different clone, or replacing own-rooted vines with grafted plants if we can improve the canopy quality and/or give the customers something they want. I don’t consider the appearance of a training system to be the most important criteria, if I can intercept more sunlight and get good fruit exposure with less work with a different system. I do NOT believe that there is a one size or one method that fits all! My philosophy as a vineyardist: matching a variety and it’s spacing to the site capacity and adopting a training system that allows the vine and its growth characteristics to optimally fill the trellis area and intercept a maximum amount of sunlight with a minimal amount of fiddling with the vine. We believe and practice:
All of this attention to detail requires a great deal of hand labor which is costly and as such we can’t be price competitive with highly mechanized bulk producers growing fewer varieties on 5-10 times the acreage. We strive to excel in quality, to provide a larger varietal selection in both grapes and juice, over a longer period of time which we hope our customers feel is value added. We appreciate your understanding and support especially in these trying economic times. Notes Pertinent to the 2011 Harvest –plus a little reminiscing
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