jackl
Junior
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2018
- Messages
- 25
- Reaction score
- 44
Just wondering how everyone tracks their yearly wine making activities. Are there apps out there?
I started making wine from my own grapes around 10 years ago. I decided I should keep a log book so I could take advantage of lessons learned from previous years as well as track each batch through its journey from grapes to wine.
Since I grow grapes, I also track vineyard maintenance to include weather, initial pruning/trellising (I use VSP), vine and leaf pruning and spraying. I’ve always used a spreadsheet for this so I can track the growth stages and spraying by the date the event was observed and date sprayed. I choose disease resistant grapes suitable to my area. I try not to overspray and my regiment includes fungicides and insecticides (primarily for Japanese beetles). I actually use Cornell’s Network for Environment and Weather Applications website as it predicts susceptibility to disease events based on the weather.
Since I just retired from a career in engineering and I now have more time, I created a spreadsheet for my wine making and transferred all of my hard copy notes to it. I’ve added formulas to do some of the basic calculations and conversions. I track event date, duration, SPG, pH, brix, tartaric acid, sulfuric acid, additives and notes. Now I can generate charts so I can watch things like pH as it changes over the fermentation process. I have tabs for red wine, white wine, apple wine and plum wine. Still a work in progress, but it fun!
I started making wine from my own grapes around 10 years ago. I decided I should keep a log book so I could take advantage of lessons learned from previous years as well as track each batch through its journey from grapes to wine.
Since I grow grapes, I also track vineyard maintenance to include weather, initial pruning/trellising (I use VSP), vine and leaf pruning and spraying. I’ve always used a spreadsheet for this so I can track the growth stages and spraying by the date the event was observed and date sprayed. I choose disease resistant grapes suitable to my area. I try not to overspray and my regiment includes fungicides and insecticides (primarily for Japanese beetles). I actually use Cornell’s Network for Environment and Weather Applications website as it predicts susceptibility to disease events based on the weather.
Since I just retired from a career in engineering and I now have more time, I created a spreadsheet for my wine making and transferred all of my hard copy notes to it. I’ve added formulas to do some of the basic calculations and conversions. I track event date, duration, SPG, pH, brix, tartaric acid, sulfuric acid, additives and notes. Now I can generate charts so I can watch things like pH as it changes over the fermentation process. I have tabs for red wine, white wine, apple wine and plum wine. Still a work in progress, but it fun!