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Start of harvest yields fewer grapes but higher quality fruit for Clarksburg grower

China Agriculture Report By CnAgriChina Agriculture Report Print

Trusted farming industry news for : commodity information, growing analysis, news, and grape production trends

“The wineries are going to be the big winners this year,” he says. “The quality of our grapes will be fabulous. They look really good, the best I’ve seen in a few years.”

In general, the berries are smaller than usual this season, Wilson notes. In particular, clusters of some of his white varieties and even Petite Syrah didn’t tighten as much with berry swelling as they typically do.

Normally, Wilson seeks to limit berry size by judicious use of water, particularly as the berries start to swell, except to minimize any heat stress. At the same time, he uses results of petiole testing at bloom and veraison to provide any needed nutrients through his drip system.

 “We try to get shoot tip growth to stop by the middle of July,” Wilson says. “But, this year the vines are controlling bunch growth and fruit quality by themselves. The lighter tonnage is a lot easier for the vines to handle.”

In fact, he says, lower production this year helps explain the Aug. 4 start of his 2015 harvest. That’s more than two weeks sooner than his usual start date of around Aug. 20.

The first of the machine-picked grapes to come off were Sauvignon Blanc at 23º Brix. While that work was underway, the harvest progressed two nights later to Gewürztraminer (22º Brix, followed four nights after that by Chenin Blanc and Pinot Gris, both testing around 23º Brix.

Barring any weather or other problems, Wilson expects to finish this year’s harvest by the end of September with the last of his Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Petite Syrah. Normally, his harvest extends into the first seven  to 10 days of October.

Wilson, who relies on water from the Sacramento River to irrigate his vineyards, reports receiving adequate supplies of surface water for his crop. At the same time his cultural practices have helped to limit his water needs.

“We were fortunate enough to get the labor to hand-thin our fruit earlier than usual this year,” he says. “In addition to saving water, less fruit meant the vines didn’t have to work as hard.”

New technology – adding more soil moisture probes and installing a weather station to monitor vine moisture stress for more timely, more accurate water applications – has also helped conserve water, he adds.

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