Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Flowering has Started

It's been a relatively normal spring for temperatures with May at an average of 13c and June on target to finish the month at around 15.6c-15.8c. That's pretty much centre target for our long term normals and the vines are growing well. 

The new "baby" vines are growing well and can be seen in the distance extending the old rows. Its 3rd year for them and many have already reached the top fruit wire and are expected to have some fruit this year.

This last week we were looking at the weather data and extrapolated when flowering might occur and we figured 60-80% flowering in and around July 1-3rd based on our historical climate-flowering records.

This is good, we really need to be flowering around then, or earlier, as our season generally ends with frost the first week of October.

So in a normal year that gives us a good 90-95 days to get the grapes to ripen to harvest. We often go mid to late October before frost but we count on early October frost. That's taking it to the limit for varieties like Marechal Foch.

As of June 25 we are seeing all varieties at the front end of flowering and with decent weather this week we should be past half way flowering by July 1st. 

A bit of a surprise is how prolific with flowers most of the vines are. With the severe cold last winter I was expecting more primary damage but its not nearly as nasty as what I was expecting. They are all looking really good and hoping for warm weather through flowering and fruitset.

One observation is how many bees are around right now. We have white clover in every second row and the clover is in full bloom and irresistible to the bees. The vineyard is literally buzzing and this times we'll with the vines flowering this next week and we will see what the next few weeks bring...some photos...

Leon Millot

Marquette


Marechal Foch


L'Acadie Blanc

Castel


Saturday, June 1, 2024

How Are Your Grapes Doing?

Typical question that comes up in conversation around the vineyard is how are the grapes. So far, so good is the correct answer for us right now..saying "right now" as there are so many stages of growth between now and harvest and potential pitfalls along the way - you cant really speak to a future state.

Last blog I wrote about the side by side difference between the row of Marechal Foch and Leon Millot. The photo below shows the Foch in the fore ground and Leon the next row over. The Foch was showing lots of buds pushing at this time and the Leon showed hardly any buds. Fast forward 2 weeks later and you can see in the next photo that the Leon is really pushing lots of buds now and catching up to the Foch - nice!


The Marquette came throught the winter well and should reach top wire this year and showing at least 2 flower clusters on each shoot. (photo below).

The Marechal Foch rows are looking good so far as well (photo below), most are in 4 leaf stage and on target for a "normal" spring. With average heat in June we should see flowering around the 24th of June.

The L'Acadie, Castel and Evangeline all took a bit of a hit this year. Castel the worst and requires some cordon and trunk re-growth. Having said that, they will all produce to varying degrees this year. 

Lots of snow still in the mountains yet, and really quite stunning this time of the year, with the green valleys - doesn't get old.




Thursday, May 16, 2024

Bud Break 2024

 So we have a better picture of how the vines made out through this past winter with the -27c cold snap. With bud break we can really see how they are.

Our Marechal Foch came through fantastic, some die back but overall strong. Leon Millot, sibling vine of Foch, got hit by the cold, probably 50% bud death but its still early to tell. The photo below shows a side by side comparison of Foch row ( fore ground) showing lots of grean leafy buds, and the next row over is Leon Millot with very few buds showing.

The L'Acadie did ok..as predicted the vines located in areas with soil deficientcies got hit hard..really hard with some trunck death. But those vines that entered winter healthy have alot of live buds and look to be very fruitful. Photo below showing buds with 2-3 flower clusters.

Now that danger of frost has passed we are trimming back the vines to a more normal bud count. We will adjust again in June. Phoro below of Foch getting a good hair cut.



Thursday, May 2, 2024

Pruning Update: looking good so far

With the deep cold we experienced this past winter...-27c...we were unsure how the vines would be budding out this year, if not trunk damage or how many live buds we would have.

We delayed pruning till we could see whats going on and we are seeing buds push now and while there is damage, in general, things are looking good. Still some time to go to determine if weve lost primary buds and flowers but we will know better by end of May.

For now we can say our commercial varieties look pretty good. We had originally been planning for -25c to -30c lows and chose vines that were supposed to be hardy to those lows.

For Reds...Marechal Foch, Leon Millot, Marquette, GR7 look pretty good so far. Castel is showing the most damage but still not too bad. Foch below;

The L'Acadie and Evangeline look good. Some L'Acadie have damage but thise appear on vines in a few pockets that were stressed due to magnesium deficiency in our sandy soil.  Evangeline is late budding so we still are not 100% sure but again they look good so far as well. L'Acadie below;

So overall things look good so far. Still waiting till they leaf out to confirm primary buds and flowers and get past any late season frosts but if all else is normal we should have a fairly normal crop too. Of interest is the other  non-commercial vines we have that are showing well with low apparent damage and pushing buds after the nasty cold snap.

Reds: Triompe D'Alsace, Colmar Precose Noir, Lucy Kuhlman, St. Croix, Marechal Joffre...all looking good.

Whites: Petite Milo, Vandal Cliche, Ravat 34...also all looking good.



Sunday, April 7, 2024

New Season 2024

Snow is all but gone in the fields by the last week in March, very similar to spring 2016. usual trellis work starts, repairing winter damage, upgrading trellising, wires etc. Awesome time of year, as the vineyard and everything around it satrts to come to life..bees and butterflys aready out and about, a few frogs noticed here and there and so early in the season the sky so blue with no smoke.


Typical for this year we are continuing the switch out of the original treated wooden posts for metals posts and earth anchors. Remarkable that several of the treated posted brok off about 6" below the ground level as we worked them back and forth to get them out of the ground.

We have noticed that alot on the wooden posts out here..just how easily they get to rottinging despite the so-called treating they received. We started noticing that in the original test vineayrd that after about 6-7 years the posts were breaking off at ground level. 

So we have moved to metal posts and notwithstanding rusting, they should survive for decades vs the wooden posts. Likewise the earth anchors should have a similar life.

The vines were not budding yet, so we don't as yet have a great guage on the survival rate of the buds on the vines but in all the commercial varieties we cut into the canes were good for the most part. We did som bud cross sectional cutting to see how some made out and every one we cut into was good on all varieties. Thats not a to say there is no bud death but the few we looked at were good.

Adding a bit of Calcium/Magnesium as we spotted areas with vines that that showed deficient last year... typical for sandy soil.

Pruning will start at the end of April as we'll have a better idea of how the vines look at that time and we are going to leave extra bud count in the even of primary bud daamage.

Saturday, March 2, 2024

2024: Not the Warmest Winter we've had - Remember 2016?

So not that much snow this year and its been pretty warm, kinda reminds me of another winter not that long ago. 2016 was one of those nice warm winters, really didnt get that cold at all and not much snow. Was remarkabley warm and by the 3rd week of March we were already working the fields and getting ready to put vines in the ground. See photo below from 2016;

In comparison to 2024, January and February of 2016 were way warmer and I suspect March 2016 will be much warmer as well than March 2024.

Month

2016 Average Temp

2024 Average Temp

January

-0.5c

-3.4c

February

2.3c

0.5c

March

5.8c

?

One of the differences is the snow pack though. We had more snow in 2016 but it was still below normal going into February. was only about 80% of normal in Februay 2016 so pretty close to this year except we are sitting with a bit less snow pack this year than that year.

Could be in for a similar spring to what we had in 2016 and if thats the case, bud break was about 2-3 weeks earlier than normal and we had alot of rain too, especially in June which impacted fruit set. 2016 was also an El Nino event as we are having in 2024, but we will see what comes.



Saturday, February 17, 2024

NO GRAPES FOR 2024? Hang On A Second

Have to say I'm rather happy right now that we decided to go with cold hardy varieties at the vineyard. We tested about 30 different grape varieities, some less hardy than others, some with greater disease resitance than others, some with different growing seasons thatn others. Over the course of testing we had a few cold winters in the -24 to-25 c range and in those parameters we found that Foch, Leon Millot, Castel and Marquette came out quite well after those events. The Petitie Milo, Evangeline and L'Acadie Blanc also came out well and generally speaking these varieties are hardy to -25c to -30c.

We settled on those 4 reds as well as Evangeline and L'Acadie Blanc. Petite Milo was /is an exceptional grape, cold hardy and disease resistant but very much like L'Acadie and no need to run a parrellel variety. - and besides both L'Acadie and Evangeline are Canadian created grapes Eh!  The Leon and Foch in the reds  also run parrellel in flvour etc., but we had planned a particular belending regime that they'd each be useful in their own way.

So here we are comming off the 2022/2023 cold winter event of -26.5c at the vineyard and yet this past year gave us the pretty much the best crop we have ever had. The Castel got knocked back a bit, and the evangeline a bit as well but the other varieties did ok. 

In the winter of 2022/2023, the Okanagan areas especially in the north half got hammered with a cold blast that decimated a significant porportion of the 2023 crop. The vines grown in the majority of the BC vineyards are vinifera and few cant handle anything colder than -23c, so the cold last year was crippling. We had 3 offers to buy our entire crop last year which had never happened before. We also had requests to supply 1000 Marechal Foch vines to a vineyard but by the time the request came in the seaosn for growing cuttings had already passed. Undoubtedly the cold last year caused some terrible damage.

Fast forward to this winter and weve had an even colder event, with a -27.5 c cold event in January 2024, actually it was preceeded by a -26c event the day before. So a couple of cold days like we've never seen. I hear that the crop outlook for the Okanagan is very bleak as they also got hit with similar cold, not exactly -27.5c but in the -24c in places around Oosoyoos to as low as -30c in the Kamloops area and this on the heals of the damage the previous winter.

Most areas of the Okanagan weve been watching are reporting nearly 100% primarly and secondary bud death on the the vines. This means no grapes will be produced this year for those vines in those areas. There is talk of purchasing grapes from out of country or Ontario and making wine and selling it at the wineries to at least have something to sell. 

Think I would pump up the price at the gate a bit for wine given the supply demand parameters but that alone wouldnt off set the gap in wine production or revenue that would occur from a year without grapes. Don't have a short term answer on the grape deficit but given the decimated crops, perhaps some thought should go into expanding acreage of more cold hardy varieties so there is not a 100% crop failure. I'm thinking some must be rethinking the the great grape pull of the 80's -where the cold hardy hybrids that had historically been grown in the Okanagan were pulled out in favour of the worldly vinifera...which are strong on flavour and varietal recognition but weak on hardiness and disease resitance.

Its at that same time that the Summerland research station that had produced 100's of new grape varieties for testing rolled up the carpet on that program as well - why develop hybrids if everyone is going to vinifera. The only vines to make a run for it from the Summerland research station project purge were Sovereign Opal and Sovereign Coronation. Too bad, betting that there were some awesome vines that came out of all of that science that just didnt get the chance..poor timing I guess. We rescued one of those oldies, Sovereign Ruby, from a location on Vancouver Island and have a handfull of those plants still growing in the test vineyard. 

If one goes back even 50 years you can see these types of cold events are not uncommon, usually not back to back in years, but they do happen. Incidently the BC grape crop consists of about 96% vinifera grapes and about 4% hybrids. The later includes the likes of Marechal Foch which has a cold hardiness range to about -30c. 

The BC Wine Grape Council produces detailed acreage reports every year and for the most recent 2022 report it provides a cross referencing of key grapes produced (top 3 reds and top 3 whites) in the BC region as well as other wine regions in Canada and the US. Of particular interest is that within the grapes reported as the top 3 reds in Ontario includes the hybrid, Baco Noir, and of the 3 top whites is included the hybrid, Vidal Blanc. Both Baco and Vidal are hybrids and capable of withstanding exceptional cold, particularly the vidal which is good to about -30c. Too bad that Marechal Foch is not listed as a top 3 red in the BC production table.

We wont know how our crop looks until early April and then at each stage along the way, through flowering and fruit set and then harvest. But first indications will be interesting. We also can get decent production off the secondary buds on Foch and L'Acadie so there is some comfort there as well.

I think we will be ok, but you never really know. We will prune late and see what damage has occured at that time and may even leave extra bud in case of primary damage and hope we have a good crop.

Sunday, December 10, 2023

Nice Fall!

We had an awesome fall with warm weather and really no snow to speak of until early December. 

We stopped counting frost free days in mid October but were well over 170bat that point. Bit of an anomaly for frost free days beyond that.

Took advantage of the great weather to get some much needed trellising done for the new vines.


Some had grown well beyond 7 feet of growth this year ...pretty awesome for 2nd yr vines and we hedged them at 5 feet. We got end posts and trellis post up this fall as well as 3ft trellis wire to keep them sturdy  through the winter.

These are all hanging curtain trellising and if we get a decent winter we should start to get a small crop off these next year. They are expected send canes up to the 5' fruit wire next year and will train them along that wire.






Wednesday, October 11, 2023

Thanksgiving

Taking a moment this thanksgiving to say thank-you to those that helped in the harvest and in various other capacities through the year.

Arrow Lakes Vineyard has grown and we would struggle without the assistance of family and friends. This year was particularly difficult as some of our usual family harvest hands were unable to assist due to timing, which was in itself unusual. We also had to harvest over several weeks with multiple deliveries to the winery. 

But we had neighbors, friends (from as far as Winnipeg, and another from just up the road, and yet another returning helper who had previously lent a hand over 10 years ago) and my brother to fill the gap.

 Wishing everyone a happy thanks giving!




















Wednesday, October 4, 2023

Harvest 2023

We had a great year this year with great production and grape quality. We started harvest 1st week of September with whites and finished with reds on the 30th

The Foch came in at 21-22 brix, the Leon Millot at 22-23 brix - overall great numbers and quality that goes hand in hand with the warmest growing season weve ever had.

St. Croix was a stand out in experimental part of the vineyard comming in at 19.5 brix (usually 17-18 brix) and and 1.5-2 lb per foot of trellis and large juicy grapes (each grape 2× diameter of Marechal Foch) with absolutely no sign of fungus or rot in a year when pretty much all the others varieties showed some impact on these. If we had another 10 days in a normal season this would be a nice grape to grow.

St. Croix below.

Other than that some of brix on the reds came in as follows for harvest of Sept 30 (unless otherwise noted below). Note that we received 1.5 inches of rain on Sept 28 which swelled the grapes, splitting some and also had a very small impact on brix.

Marechal Foch 21.5 

Leon Millot 23 

Castel 25 (Sept 19)

Triompe 22

Lucy Kulhman 22

Marechal Joffre 21

Colmar Precose Noir 24

L'Acadie 22.5 (Sep 19)

Evangeline 19.5 (Sept 7)

Ravat 34 18 (Sept 19)

Petite Milo 22 (Sept 19)

Vandal Cliche 18 (Sept 19)

Foch below...