4. Approaches to Grape Growing Flashcards
What is main aim of organic viticulture (2)?
- Seeks to improve the soil of the vineyard and range of microbes and animals in it and thereby increase the health and disease-resistance of the vine
- Rejects manmade fertilizers, chemicals, etc.
What methods do organic grape growers use to protect vines from downy and powdery mildew (2)?
What is a major disadvantage of this method?
- Traditional remedies e.g. sulfur and copper sulfate sprays.
- Close monitoring of weather to determine when spraying is necessary.
Spraying can lead to build-up of heavy metal (copper) in soil = some believe that careful usage of longer-lasting synthetic fungicides are less harmful to the environment.
What are advantages of conventional viticulture (3)?
- Ability to mechanise work
- Reduction of competition from other plants
- Ability to tend to specific needs to grape variety planted (e.g. irrigation, nutrition level, pests, diseases)
What are advantages of sustainable viticulture (4)?
- More thoughtful approach to grape growing, with attention to the 3 themes (ECON / SOC / ENVIRON impact)
- Reduction in spraying synthetic treatments = healthier soil + land.
- Saved cost from reduction of sprayings
- A better understanding of the threats to successful grape growing to minimize interventions needed
What are disadvantages of sustainable viticulture?
Provide a specific example where this has been an issue:
- The term isn’t protected = no clear set of standards.
- Lack of regulations can = danger that nationwide standards can be set too low
e. g. NZ’s Sustainable Winegrowing program has been both praised for greatly reducing pesticide use but also criticized for setting a very low bar for certification.
What is the main aim of conventional viticulture?
How is this achieved?
Main aim is maximizing profit by raising production levels and reducing labour requirements.
- achieved through mechanization, chemical inputs, irrigation and clonal selection
What is IFOAM?
What must a vineyard undergo before reaching certification?
International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements.
A universal requirement of producers wishing to achieve organic certification is a period of conversion working to organic standards.
What is “green manure?”
Green Manure is the ploughing/mulching of cover crops into the soil in order to provide organic matter and serve as a natural source of fertilizer.
Explain what “ashing” is, in the context of Biodynamic Viticulture:
- Spreading the ashes of burnt weed seeds or harmful pests (e.g. rats/sparrows) on the vineyards to ward off these hazards.
What are the 2 ways in which data is collected for Precision Viticulture?
What types of technology allow the data to be presented visually in the form of maps (2)?
Data is collected by sensors either on
1) Aircraft (“Remote”) or 2) Tractor/harvester (“Proximal”)
Geospatial technology (e.g. GPS or Geographical Information Systems (GIS)) is used to create maps.
What is precision viticulture?
What end result is it trying to achieve?
- Instead of adopting a uniform approach to work in the vineyard, Precision Agriculture makes use of data collected in vineyard (soil, vigour, topography, plant growth, etc.) to respond to changes from plot to plot and row to row.
- Aim is to produce best quality + yield possible by carrying out key interventions (e.g. pruning / leaf removal / treatments / irrigation / crop thinning / harvesting) as precisely as possible.
What are advantages of organic viticulture (3)?
- Makes health and disease resistance of vine/soil the central aim
- Reduction in chemicals used = saved cost
- Reduction in chemical / synthetic sprays reduces environmental impact
What are the advantages (3) and disadvantages (2) of Precision Viticulture?
ADV: - detailed understanding of vineyard variations that affect yield/quality.
- ability to tailor key interventions (rootstock, canopy management, treatments, harvest dates) = higher yield/quality.
- $$$ saved by reducing unneeded labor/treatments.
DIS: - initial investment required for equipment/software/labor is high.
- initial cost of remote data collection.
Give a brief example and description of a Biodynamic “Preparation” and its purpose:
Preparation 500 (cow manure): Homeopathic compost created by stuffing cow manure into a cow’s horn, burying it in the soil over the winter, digging it up and then “dynamizing” it (mixing with water) so it can be sprayed.
What are 3 examples of organizations that certify standards of Sustainable Agriculture?
- LODI RULES (Lodi, California)
- Sustainable Winegrowing NZ
- Sustainable Winegrowing South Africa