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We went from 80's (when I tested) to low 50's at night to mid 60's day and rainy now for a few days. I'm hoping we get back to warm!
We went from 80's (when I tested) to low 50's at night to mid 60's day and rainy now for a few days. I'm hoping we get back to warm!
Yes it is… my good wife’s contribution, it’s proper name is tulle. Not only keeps out the birds, but wasps, and other flying critters.is that bridal veil material?
37 in Stanwood, Wa.44 this morning.
Thank you NorCal!!Cheering for you! I have all my wine post fermentation, but have fellow local winemakers that are just getting started. I hope you get the brix and ripeness to the point you can make good wine.
malolactic fermentation will take care of it. Be careful at 26 brix that you don't choke ML bacteria with high sulphite at high alcohol due to high brix.Fingers crossed for you! I’m hoping to pick Syrah today. Brix was 26 on Thursday morning but ph was only 3.22. I’ll test first thing this morning but also can’t wait much longer as birds and bees are just hammering the grapes.
We have low pH across the board on the grapes so will need to deal with that this winter.
Yup, I'm not totally sure if its red blotch either but it's pretty clear these particular vines will never get better and are just taking up space / time / nutrients at this point so they gotta go. I bought all 6 from Armstrong nursery in Temecula the same season, so its likely that they are all cuttings from the same infected vine. At the time I certainly didn't realize the consequence of buying vines that may not be from certified growers, but I sure know that now. The good news is that over all these years the disease / virus hasn't likely spread to my other vines, which I also planted the same year and show no signs of this issue. Live and learn...I am not sure it is red blotch but it looks like a virus of some kind. Grapevines can live a long time with virus but they always seem to linger and produce poorly. In a marginal growing condition the vines die and the problem takes years to develop. Sorry to see it. I do not trust vines to be virus free unless they are from certified growers. Even then, infected vines have been know to slip through, but growers have a protocol to check for that happening.
Potassium or Phosphorous deficiency, try a soil test it will identify the deficiencyDon’t want to hijack my own thread, could this to be a mineral/chemical deficiency, not a virus? Every year, I have big beautiful green leaves and the edges start going red just about veraison time. Very few get to the stage yours are at being totally red. Yours are also concentrated is one area? Mine do the red around the edges from verasion to the leaf fall off at the start of winter.
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Ha! Yeah sorry, it wasn't my intention to hijack your thread, I was trying to point out that your leaves look similar to mine so I was suggesting that "if" this is red blotch in both cases it may explain why my zin didn't ripen and neither are your grapes. It's possible in your case it's a deficiency, but in mine it's unlikely given that all my other vines are fed and watered the same way but don't have the problem.Don’t want to hijack my own thread, could this to be a mineral/chemical deficiency, not a virus? Every year, I have big beautiful green leaves and the edges start going red just about veraison time. Very few get to the stage yours are at being totally red. Yours are also concentrated is one area? Mine do the red around the edges from verasion to the leaf fall off at the start of winter.
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Yeah that's looking pretty close in appearance. The varietal I'm having issues with is zinfandel, my merlot is totally fine. Thanks for the tip, I'll look into Eutypa.@David Engel Here is a picture of a Cab Sauv vine that has similar red coloration. I have flagged this arm for removal because I found Eutypa on a pruning cut. So you could have something wrong with that spur or cane. I think you said this is Merlot, which is not very subseptable to Eutypa but it is worth thinking about.
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