Over the weekend of May 16-17 this year, we experienced a brief but significant heat spike. Our vines had begun flowering the previous week (less than five percent), and temperatures had ranged from the 70s to the low 80s throughout the week.
As the mercury approached high 90s F., the vines had moved into full bloom. Grapevines are rather vulnerable during this period and require moderate conditions for complete pollination. Extremes of cool, hot, dry or wet weather can interrupt the process.
A good synonym for a vintage is “weather pattern.” Each growing season is a collection of fog and heat and wind and rain events. As wine grape growers, we can’t control the weather, but we do try to react to it in an appropriate manner to obtain the end product we want.
This year, as in 2007, the heat and subsequent rapid and incomplete flowering gave us little shot berries and … More…






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