Vineyard Diary (updated 6-20-07)

The last month has been dry (as expected) and generally quite pleasant–just a handful of hotter days that have portended the higher heat to come.  The vineyard has never looked better this far into the season for us, a sign that we might actually be learning something.  Particularly gratifying has been the general health of block 4 barbera, which mostly sits on a shallow quartz vein and has, in the past, produced little fruit for us.  We have successfully passed the most critical time for mildew prevention, so the main focus for the balance of the season will be watering appropriately and modulating fruit loads to targets.  The fruit is set in both vineyards, with the berries in a rapid growth phase, and shoot growth slowing.  Based on casual observation, it appears that fruitload in the barbera is naturally lower than last year, which will mean less fruit for us to drop manually.  But that’s okay, because some weeds in the rows have once evaded our modest prevention efforts and will give us something to do to fill our copious spare time in 90-degree plus mid-summer days.   We will also be devoting a little more time training vines in the port vineyard to make sure that is well-positioned to produce a first commercial crop next year.

Vineyard Diary (updated 5-22-07)

The spring rains trickled in as long as they could, but it appears that we’re now firmly in the grip of the summer weather pattern:  unrelenting sunshine.  That said, temperatures have remained seasonable and generally quite pleasant, making it a wonderful time to be out in the vineyard (okay, there really aren’t any bad times…).  The shoots have grown at their usual incredible rate, and flowering has recently occurred in the barbera and is ongoing in the primitivo.  Interestingly, we lost a large number of barbera shoots to the last rain of the season that, in the absence of wind that day, weighed on the large but still delicate shoots, breaking them off.  But most plants have recovered by sprouting additional shoots.  Suckering and shoot thinning is ongoing in the primitivo vineyard, as are regular sprayings for powdery mildew prevention.  If there’s one thing we’ve learned, it’s that when the weather is perfect for us to be in the vineyard, it’s even better for powdery mildew.  So far, there have been no signs of this bane of grape growers.  We’ve just begun irrigating and hope that the water holds out after the relatively dry winter. 

Vineyard Diary (updated 4-21-07)

This is probably the most beautiful time of the year in the vineyard, with swaths of short green grass between rows alternating with the brown of the soil between rows, and the sight of pale green grape shoots not yet out of control.  Budburst was evident in the primitivo vineyard within days of the barbera vineyard, although the average primitivo plant remains a couple weeks behind the growth of the barbera.  As usual, far more barbera shoots blasted forth than seemed possible given the number of buds left by winter pruning, and so a round of shoot thinning has already been done to improve air flow and constrain yield.  The barbera vineyard was additionally limed by hand just in time to get partially washed in by a series of modest but welcome spring rains, with a little more rain on the way.   The port vineyard and a portion of the primitivo vineyard was graded and leveled to improve tractor access and safety.    All in all, the season is off to a great start.

Vineyard Diary (updated 3-18-07)

And so it begins:  the 2007 season is officially under way at Shaker Ridge, with budburst evident in the barbera vineyard on March 17, St. Patrick’s Day.  This represents a fairly average timing for our vineyard.  It has been an absolutely beautiful late winter, but we sure wish we would get a little more rain before spring sets in.  We’ve continued to manually move rocks–our winter crop–out of the vineyard, and are making steady progress hanging drip hose (ie, getting it off the ground) some 5 years after planting.  Better late than never….

Vineyard Diary (updated 2-24-07)

A cold but historically dry January has given way to seasonably cool temperatures and much-needed winter rainfall in Februrary.  These conditions should conspire to keep the grape plants dormant for a few more weeks and allow us to perform much-needed maintenance operations in the vineyard.  Today we completed the critical winter pruning operation that is a key part of controlling yield, and weed control was completed last week.  We continue the never-ending process of rock picking along with grading and erosion control.