Vacirca's Organics
Junior
Hey everyone. My name is Chris. Been an organic farmer for the last 25 years, and over the last 6 years got into grape growing. Prior to this year, our grape vines were always just a grape vine growing on a fence, and let to grow free. 4 years ago I started studying the different training systems used for grape vines, and which species required which training systems. So, this year I purchased wine grape varieties for the first time, having only worked with concord grape vines in the past. I ordered a total of 13 vines, 1 from each of the species I wanted. A grafted Cabernet Sauvignon, a grafted gewurztraminer, a Marechal Froch, Frontanac, frontenac gris, frontenac Blanc, La Crosse, Fredonia, baco noir, mars, marquis, osceola muscat, and NY muscat, as well as the Concord, Niagara, Himrod, and reliance I had growing in previous years. The white niagara died last winter. Not sure how since It was a mild winter, but, it never came back this year which was disappointing. Loved that vine. But, in previous years we really never maintained it.
Now, here is the reason I am here. I built a number of training systems for these vines, and they have been growing for the last month. I have an 8' top wire, a 16 foot top wire, a 24' top wire, 2 18' top wires, 1 mid wire cordon, 1 4 arm kniffen, an 18' Vertical Shoot Position trellis with 5 sets of catch wires going up 7', and an 18' modified munson system. I built these based off the suggested "best training system to be used for the grape" coming from Double A Vineyards which is where the vines came from. The part that is still confusing to me is which of these training practices are most productive:
Allowing the vine to grow straight up and cutting it off 2 inches from the top wire on top wire systems, and the bottom wire on VSP and so on, and then having 2 "Arms" come out from where the cut is to become the cordons.
Or:
Allowing the vine to grow up and then follow the cable to become the cordons from the trunk, so basically allowing the trunk to also be the cordons.
I have seen both ways being done, including in the publications I have printed out, and in the videos I have watched. But, I do not know if there is any specific reasoning for the different styles of achieving the same result, or if there is a scientific reason behind it.
If anyone has this information, please let me know. I greatly appreciate any information you have. Thank you in advance.
Now, here is the reason I am here. I built a number of training systems for these vines, and they have been growing for the last month. I have an 8' top wire, a 16 foot top wire, a 24' top wire, 2 18' top wires, 1 mid wire cordon, 1 4 arm kniffen, an 18' Vertical Shoot Position trellis with 5 sets of catch wires going up 7', and an 18' modified munson system. I built these based off the suggested "best training system to be used for the grape" coming from Double A Vineyards which is where the vines came from. The part that is still confusing to me is which of these training practices are most productive:
Allowing the vine to grow straight up and cutting it off 2 inches from the top wire on top wire systems, and the bottom wire on VSP and so on, and then having 2 "Arms" come out from where the cut is to become the cordons.
Or:
Allowing the vine to grow up and then follow the cable to become the cordons from the trunk, so basically allowing the trunk to also be the cordons.
I have seen both ways being done, including in the publications I have printed out, and in the videos I have watched. But, I do not know if there is any specific reasoning for the different styles of achieving the same result, or if there is a scientific reason behind it.
If anyone has this information, please let me know. I greatly appreciate any information you have. Thank you in advance.