Ct Winemaker
Member
Take a look at Double A vineyards. Vine prices are very reasonable, and their web site is very helpful for making decisions, including trellis system.
I am in SE Wisconsin. With Marquette, petite pearl and verona varieties. Planted north and south, 9 feet rows and 7.5 feet spacing. Works good for me.Thanks jakle
I’m still working on the design. I have been told by my wife that I need to include blackberries as well as they make Some Of her favorite wines. I have a book coming in the mail on raising grapes in cold climates by Plocher for some light winter reading. Hopefully it has some good information on varieties and trellising. I probably have room for 80 or 90 vines total so I hope to get the whole area prepared this year and fill it in over the next few.
what kind of plant and row spacing do you have?
I am in SE Wisconsin. With Marquette, petite pearl and verona varieties. Planted north and south, 9 feet rows and 7.5 feet spacing. Works good for me.
Double A is my source. They have suffered low stock last year and this. Fortunately they are planning ahead and encouraging orders for 2023 and beyond. I love the prices and their service. I've called and begged for vines and got results.
As for large growers rooting and grafting their own vines, that is not an industry practice due to the need for clean, certified vines. Disease transmission is a huge worry and no one wants to lose acres from the start. It is bad enough once the vines are growing. Also, rooting and grafting takes manpower, time and space that most growers don't have. I can root on a hobby basis but my success rate is limited and I prefer certainty.
Anyway, excellent choice with Double A!
My first wine from grapes was pure Marquette, wine was ok. Next time I added 30% petite pearl and wine was good. Now that I added verona to the mix the wine is outstanding. I'm no expert wine person just my opinion. If you are ever around the lake geneva area, pm me and we can taste some.How do you like the petite pearl. This is one I see coming up a lot with northern growers along with Marquette. I’m no purist (hell I’m still making my first batch of grape wine and it’s from wild grapes) so I’m ok with blending, adding sugar, mixing with other fruits, back sweetening etc. Actually I’m learning a lot and only recently realized you can’t make Merlot from Marquette grapes . I just want to make good wine that my wife and I like to drink. That typically means semi-sweet. So far I have had good success with fruits and want to step up to grapes.
So I’m still doing some vineyard planning. I have decided to lay out my rows so they are more north-south. The three or four shorter rows on the left of the photo are going to be blackberry canes. I’ll still have space for about 90 vines with 9-foot row spacing and 7-foot plant spacing.
I have two questions.How much space should I leave between the vineyard and the field? The picture has 20 feet. Are grapes very susceptible to herbicide drift? Also, do I need to control wild grapes for some distance from the vineyard? They are everywhere around here.
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Really?? . I’m kinda on the edge of good farm country with ample woods and wetlands so yeah… we have lots of deer. I’m in a perpetual show-no-mercy war with rabbits and have them under control but I still have to erect a fence around the garden every year to keep the deer out. I hadn’t planned on 600 feet of deer fence right now. Could I get away with caging the vines for the first year? Also, do chickens and grapevines get along? Could I free-range my hens in the enclosure?if your in an area with a deer population you will need a deer fence. They will destroy a young vineyard in no time
I fence the garden With a 5’ temporary fence in the summer but it’s a small enclosure and deer don’t seem to like jumping into a small fenced area. Around here most people put in an 8-foot high-tensile fence for deer. I’m surprised deer like grape vines but I should have known. The list of what they won’t eat is quite small.i fenced my Montana vineyard with 5' welded wire mesh and it was very effective in keeping the deer out. put chicken wire cages around the young vines to deter rabbits.
Thanks. I feel better about it now! I have my first 24 vines arriving this spring and I didn’t budget for a deer fence. Did you use grow tubes right from the start? How tall are the tubes? I see you use the VSP trellising but a lot of the studies for Marquette say to go with a high wire system. That should make the vines harder for the deer to brows, no?I have tremendous deer pressure and grow tubes have been my protection from deer and rabbits. The deer will prune some of the vines that come out of the top of the tubes but the vines recover. They will also prune the young growth on the older vines but since i have to hedge the vines I count it as free labor. I’ve been lucky so far. I have 1.5 acres with vines from 1 year old to 4 years old.
I’ve been thinking of deer fence but haven’t pulled the trigger.
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