Vineyard Management Flashcards

1
Q

What does a grape grower have to consider when choosing a site for a vineyard?

A

Environmental conditions - rainfall, sunlight, soil type
Grape variety
Access to utility infrastructure - power, water, workforce

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2
Q

Vine Training

A

This refers to the shape of permanent wood. There are two types of training.
Low trained to retain heat from soil
High trained to prevent frost

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3
Q

Head Training

A

These vines have very little permanent wood, some only the trunk. Others have a few short arms growing from the top of the trunk. They can other be spur pruned or replacement cane pruned

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4
Q

Cordon Training

A

These vines tend to have one or more permanent horizontal arms or cordons. They are usually spur pruned
Cordon training takes longer to establish because of the greater around of permanent wood
Its sturdy permanent cordon shoots positioned along its length makes mechanisation in the vineyard such as machine harvest easier to achieve.

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5
Q

Vine pruning

A

Removal of unwanted leaves, canes and permanent wood
Shapes the vine and limits its size
Takes place every summer and winter

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6
Q

Winter pruning

A

Main purpose is to determine the number and location of buds for coming growing season
Important to make sure buds are not too close together for canopy management purposes

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7
Q

Spur Pruning

A

Short sections of one year old wood that have been cut to two or three buds
Spurs are either distributed along a cordon of permanent wood or around the top of the trunk

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8
Q

Replacement Cane Pruning

A

Typically only one or two canes are retained and tied horizontally to trellis wire.
It’s more complex than spur pruning
Sometimes referred to as guyot training
Single guyot if one cane retained
Double guyot if two are retained

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9
Q

Canes

A

Longer sections of one year old wood and tend to have between 8-20 buds

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10
Q

Summer Pruning

A

Involves trimming the canopy to restrict vegetative growth and direct sugar production to the grapes rather than growth of shoots and leaves
Also strips leaves so that grapes get direct exposure to the sunlight

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11
Q

Untrellised Vineyards

A

This is where there is no trellis in place and shoots hang down to the ground.

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12
Q

What climate are Untrellised Vineyards generally used?

A

Usually in warm climates such as northern Rhone or Barossa Valley where the grapes need extra shade which they get from the vegetation hanging down

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13
Q

Bush Vines

A

Usually in hot climates and they are Untrellised. They tend to be head trained and spur pruned
Also not suitable to machine harvesting

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14
Q

Bush Vines in cool climates

A

Usually avoided in cool climates due to lack of aeration. Grapes in cool climates need as much sunlight as possible to ripen and bush vines act as shelter

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15
Q

Trellised vineyards

A

Where a line of of wire runs through vines to allow canes and shoots to be tied up

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16
Q

Three reasons for trellising?

A

1.Arrangement of young shoots can control sunlight. Cool climates - more direct sunlight - warm climates - you can arrange shoots to flop down and act as shade
2. Improves circulation in vineyard which prevents stagnant air increasing chances of fungal disease
3. Easier for mechanisation in vineyard for machine harvesting and spraying insecticides and fungicides

17
Q

VSP

A

Vertical Shoot Positioning
Trained vertically and tied in place onto trellis wire forming a single narrow canopy
Replacement cane or spur pruned

18
Q

VSP - Cool climates

A

Keeping the shoots apart keeps the canopy well aerated, open and allows the sunlight in

19
Q

VSP - Hot Climates

A

Easier for machine harvest and allowes the top of the shoots to hang over to create shade to prevent sunburn

20
Q

Density

A

Number of vines planted per hectare
Can be as many as 10,000 or as few as 1,000

21
Q

Hectare

A

A square with 100 metre sides
0.4 acres per hectare

22
Q

Limited water availability

A

Usually low density planting so that vine doesn’t have to compete with other vines. Usually a bush vine or a trellis with shoots flopping over for shade

23
Q

Low level of nutrients and sufficient water

A

Possible for vines to thrive in this environment
High density VSP trellised vines
This makes the vines compete for water and allows just sufficient amounts rather than too much

24
Q

What happens if the vine has too much water?

A

If the vine has too much water, growth can thrive and it can concentrate growth to leaves and away from grapes producing less flavour

25
Q

Why is it important to have the right amount of buds in a low nutrient high water vineyard

A

If there are too few buds the vine will have to much energy, too many buds they won’t have enough energy to ripen the crop

26
Q

High level of nutrients and sufficient rainfall

A

While highly fertile soils are not suitable for viticulture it is possible for vines to thrive in the enough

27
Q

what can be done to stem the growth of vines in areas with fertile soil and sufficient water?

A

Low density planting using vines with multiple cordons or cane. This will increase the amount of buds which will increase yields and keep grape quality high. Each bud will have sufficient nutrition and water to grow and ripen its crop

28
Q

Yields

A

This is the amount of grapes produced usually in tons or hectolitres

29
Q

Why is it important for growers to estimate yields?

A

Growers will need to estimate yields as they have contractually obligations as well as managing tank space

30
Q

How can a grape grower estimate yields?

A

He can estimate yields by knowing how many buds are left following winter pruning

31
Q

What affects a grape growers yield estimates and final figures?

A

Frost damage, poor fruit set pests and diseases

32
Q

Green harvest

A

If yields are going to be too high growers can remove immature grapes after veraison

33
Q

What are the risks of green harvest?

A

The vine can over compensate for the loss of grapes by producing bigger grapes which produce the same amount of juice but with less concentrated flavour

34
Q

Yields and quality

A

Traditionally there was a view that high yields produced lower quality grapes and low yields produce higher quality grapes but it is down the the individual vineyard