Viticulture (soil types, growing environment) Flashcards
1
Q
What are the four primary soil types?
A
- Sandy Soils
- Clay Based Soils
- Silt Soils
- Loam Soils
2
Q
The properties of sandy soils and best wines from them
A
- Sandy soils are well-drained and retain heat.
- In cool climate produce highly aromatic wines.
- In warm climate make ‘softer’ wines with less color, lighter acidity and tannin. eg Swartland, South Africa
- resist pests (esp phyllox) encourages organic
- Barolo Cannubi sandy clay soils - intense aromatics, light tannin and very pale color.
- Northern Médoc (close to the sea), Graves. Lighter, more aromatic Cabernet Sauvignon.
- In Lodi 1890’s Zinfandel survived phylloxera
3
Q
The properties of clay soils and best wines from them
A
- Clay soils stay cooler and retain water.
- several types, including a lime rich clay called Calcareous Clay - even cooler. Make boldest red and white wines
- In Rioja and Ribera del Duero, best Tempranillo vineyards grow on limestone-rich clay soils.
- Vosne-Romanée best Pinot on Marl - clay limestone soil
- In Chianti Sangiovese on Albarese soil is a clay-limestone
- Napa hillside vineyards on clay loam
- great Barossa Shiraz on clay-loam soils
4
Q
The properties of silt soils (eg loess) and best wines from them
A
- Smooth and round wines with slightly less acidity
- silt soils retain water and heat
- very fine grained - growing roots very difficult
- In cooler climate regions that have sun, the ideal silt soil sites tend to be mixed with a portion of limestone
- Loess (wind-blown silt) soils in eastern Washington covers the sandy-loam ancient flood soils below. Wines are highly aromatic, lighter color and smooth tannin.
- Oregon Pinot Noir often on loess/ silt- clay.
5
Q
The properties of loam soils and best wines from them
A
- Loam is too fertile unless it’s blended
- a mix of silt, clay and sand as well as an organic matter called humus
- very fertile, causes vineyards to be over vigorous = wines with little flavor and color. Yet offer great potential if rigorous pruning regimes
- parts of Sonoma Valley and Napa Valley is sandy-loam - the sand keeps soil poor enough for high quality grapes
6
Q
the effects of gravel, slate, schist and volcanic soils
A
- gravel, slate, schist are rocks which can change the temperature of a soil (by retaining heat or reflecting sun) and they also affect drainage.
- in Bordeaux the gravel in the clay soil increases drainage
- in cool Mosel Valley blue slate retains heat from the sun
- decomposed volcanic soils retain water - good in dry regions eg Lanzarote (Spain), Santorini
7
Q
Limestone rich soils and great wine
A
- limestone gives nutrients to vines - to grow better/ produce sweeter grapes.
- retains moisture in dry weather, good drainage in wet
- one negative of lime is it causes iron deficiency in grapes so high lime content soils must be fertilized frequently
- Great whites: chalk soils of Aube in Champagne; Chablis in Burgundy; Pouilly/Sancerre in Loire Valley produce bold-flavored zesty white wines.
- Calcareous soils in Southern Rhône famous for classic Côtes du Rhône of Grenache, Syrah and Mourvèdre
- similar soils for same grapes in Paso Robles, California
8
Q
all the areas to consider in growing environment
A
- temperature, sunlight, latitude
- altitude, slopes, aspects, proximity to water
- winds
- soil characteristics, nutrients
- mist, fog, clouds
- diurnal range
- rainfall
- climate (growing days)
- weather, El Nino, La Nina
- climate change