Pruning for Sap Flow: Extending Vineyard Life & Improving Output

Published on GuildSomm.com:

In the vineyard, trunk diseases are spread through fungal pathogens that enter the wood through wounds, most often from pruning but also from other mechanical injuries to the vine. The diseases can metastasize over time, resulting in symptoms that include dead spurs and stunted shoots, as well as internal wood symptoms that can be seen via cross-sectional cuts on permanent wood. These can lead to the partial or total death of the vine. The most prevalent trunk diseases globally are Esca and Eutypa dieback. (While these are the focus of this article, it’s important to note that other diseases, such as Botryosphaeria dieback and Phomopsis dieback, are also common in certain regions.) The economic impact of these diseases is seen in dramatic yield reductions and, ultimately, loss of the vine. Recent estimates indicate that properties can lose 10 to 20% of their vines in a season once affected.

To address this major challenge, specific pruning methods that focus on sap flow are increasingly being implemented, with the aim of helping to extend the life of vineyards by preserving pathways for nutrients to sustain the vine. This article will outline the diseases these practices confront and examine the methods themselves, including their history, associated challenges, and sustainability.

DiebackDead wood (dieback) is marked by the darker brown visible in this cross section (Photo credit: Sarah Bray)

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The Art of Winemaking

Winemaking as an art is something people, myself included, often talk about, but it’s a concept that’s just as hard to wrap your mind around as terroir, until you’ve experienced it yourself. Just what makes every bottle of wine unique is a whole slew of consecutive moments, some things that just happen (heat, rain, the vintage as a whole), others where more active decisions take place (how you prune and train the vines, destemming, oak regime). I’ve seen and participated in many of these moments, but never that important process where a wine is actually made — that is, where the blend is determined, where grapes from one vineyard site are singled out as a stellar parcel, the rolling around of vat samples across your tongue to sense quality / taste / structure / longevity as components of a potential whole, to perceive how those parts might come together. That changed for me today when I tasted through the entirety of barrel samples of Tenuta di Trinoro’s 2015 vintage with Andrea Franchetti and his assistant winemaker Teresa Gaspar.2015 Trinoro Vat Samples

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Plum, Vanilla, & Honey: Grapes Ripening at Tenuta di Trinoro

Trinoro VinesArriving at Trinoro was like driving across a moonscape, with the rich, clay-filled earth cracked and churned from the recent wheat harvest. Only after cresting the hill from Sarteano into the Val d’Orcia and winding our way down the gravel road did we begin to pass by plots of land filled with vines. Andrea Franchetti, owner of Tenuta di Trinoro, explained to me that, of his 200 hectares, only a small portion is under vine – he’d planted what land he could to which the grapes would take, the rest dominated by the thick clay or hidden under the growth of the thick forests that surround the property.

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