Title: Crop Load Management Science or Belief System
1Crop Load ManagementScience or Belief System?
- Andrew G. Reynolds
- Cool Climate Oenology Viticulture Institute
- Brock University, St. Catharines, ON
2Low yield High wine quality?
3The Belief System
4Crop Load ManagementMust be About Balance
5The Balance Sweet Spot
SHADE OVERCROPPING
SHADE
BALANCE
HIGH VIGOUR SITE
LOW VIGOUR SITE
6What is Balance?
- Mean individual cane weights of 25 to 40 g
- Cane pruning weights of 0.3 lbs./ft of canopy
(0.4 kg/m canopy) - Crop loads (Ravaz Index crop size to vine size
ratio) gt 5 lt 12 - Closer to the low end for Pinot noir and
late-maturing reds and nearer to the high end for
aromatic whites
7Berry Maturity
Low GDD Poor seasons Rain
Winter injury risk spacing
Reduce crop size
Increase vine size
Crop Size
Vine Size
Ravaz Index ca. 10
8Balanced vines High Wine Quality
Vines at Chateau Margaux in clay. Balanced at 2
t/a
9Balanced vines High Wine Quality
Vines at Chateau Couhins in gravel. Balanced at
6 t/a
10Points to Remember About Crop Management
- Crop control can be achieved by both pruning and
cluster thinning - Taking aim at a reasonable shoot density (e.g. 15
shoots/m row) should minimize shade and get you
close to the target crop load - I suspect that most so-called crop load effects
are often shoot density/ shade effects - Often severe pruning can lead to low crops high
shading and can be just as detrimental as
overcropping (q.v. Chapman et al.)
11Shoot Density
- 15-25 shoots/m row
- High fruitfulness
- Optimum bud hardiness
- High Brix low TA and pH
- Enhanced varietal character
- Minimized vegetal aromas
- Enhanced color
- High (or very low) shoot density
- Low fruitfulness
- Low Brix high TA/pH
- Reduced varietal character, e.g. monoterpenes
- Increased vegetal flavors
- Poor color
12Points to Remember About Crop Load Management
- Responses to crop load reduction will vary
substantially - From site to site
- Between varieties
- Across vintages
- Depending on when crop adjustment is done
- Making general conclusions may be difficult and
recommendations need to be tailored to each
situation (here goes 45 minutes of ambiguity)
13Crop Load Management1. Some Varieties are
Non-Responsive(and others are very responsive)
14Pinot noir Response to Shoot Density and Crop
Level
15Pinot noir Response of yield and fruit
composition to shoot density, Okanagan Falls, BC
1989.These are non-crop related shade responses.
(A 20 shoot/m Scott Henry treatment improved
fruit composition vs 10 shoots/m)
16Pinot noir Response of yield and fruit
composition to crop level, Okanagan Falls, BC
1991The crop level response may not be as large
as expected
17Some sensory effects of crop level reduction on
BC and OR Pinot noir, 1989-92Proof is in the
glass
- Reductions
- Vegetal aroma (BC)
- Vegetal flavor (BC)
- Grassy aroma (OR)
- Increases
- Color (BC OR)
- Spicy/black pepper aroma (BC)
- Fruity flavor (BC OR)
- Berry aroma flavor (OR)
- Tree fruit aroma (OR)
- Currant flavor (BC)
- Astringency (BC OR)
- Finish (BC)
18Riesling Response to Shoot Density and Crop Level
19Riesling Impact of shoot density crop level on
growth, yield, and fruit composition, Kelowna,
BC, 1989-90
20RieslingImpact of Crop Level on Aroma
CompoundsA notable reduction in green
compounds with crop thinning
21RieslingImpact of Crop Level on Sensory
AttributesGreen fruit character is diminished by
thinning
22PCA of sensory data, Riesling shoot density X
crop level, Kelowna, BC 1989Shade ultimately
plays perhaps a greater role
Clusters/shoot Solid 2 bold 1.5 open 1
16 shoots/m
26 shoots/m
36 shoots/m
23Chardonnay Musqué
24Yield vs BrixA clear yield Brix relationship
THINNED TREATMENTS
25Muscat Aroma vs. Overall Quality Brix has little
apparent effect
NON-THINNED
26Chardonnay Musqué SensoryThinning in some cases
ineffective Time of thinning not critical
27Response of Icewines to Crop Load Manipulation
28Sensory Map of the Significantly Different
Attributes in 2003 Vidal Crop Level Icewines
- All sensory attributes associated with the
thinned treatments - Thin at veraison associated with several aroma
flavour attributes
Data courtesy Amy Bowen, Brock University
29Sensory Map of the Significantly Different
Attributes in 2004 Vidal Crop Level Icewines
- Most attributes associated with the thinned
treatments - Except nut flavour which is loaded with the
control - Nut and honey are inversely correlated
30Crop Load Management2. Some Fruit Composition
Variables are Non-Responsive
31Individual Phenols, Cabernet Sauvignon
2004Catechin, quercetin non-responsive
32Individual Non-acylated Anthocyanins, Cabernet
Sauvignon 2004Most non-acylated pigments
responded to crop reduction
33Individual Acetylated Anthocyanins, Cabernet
Sauvignon 2004Some, e.g. malvidin, were not
responsive
34Crop Load Management3. Season can be Critical
35Brix, Cabernet Franc 2004-06Cluster thinning
increases in only 2 of 6 cases leaf removal
alone no effect or reduced
36Anthocyanins, Cabernet Franc 2004-06BLR
ineffective CT increased in 2 of 3 years CTBLR
not additive
37Colour Intensity, Cabernet Franc 2004-06 BLR
again ineffective thinning increased colour in 2
of 6 instances
38Total Phenols, Cabernet Sauvignon 2004-06Cluster
thinning increased phenols in 2 of 6 cases BLR
alone only once
39Sensory attributes, Cabernet Franc, as impacted
by viticultural treatment, 2004
40Sensory attributes, Cabernet Franc, as impacted
by viticultural treatment, 2005
41Crop Load Management4. Timing is Sometimes
Crucial to Quality (but often not!)
42Chardonnay Musqué FVTThinning was beneficial
early timing most effective
43Chardonnay Musqué PVTThinning was beneficial
timing apparently not critical
44Chardonnay Musqué Sensory PCAThinning was of
questionable benefit timing apparently not
critical
45Cluster thinning -- When to do it
46Cluster thinning -- When to do it
47When to Thin
- To reduce a potential overcrop situation in a
specific year that may have resulted from
conditions the previous year - To maintain consistent yields and fruit
composition in varieties with fruitful base
shoots and/or secondary/ tertiary buds (mainly
hybrids) - To avoid overcropping in large-clustered
varieties, particularly Syrah, Grenache,
Mourvedre, Zinfandel, Bordeaux reds, etc. - To get a crop to mature in a difficult year
48Conclusions and Final Thoughts
- Responses to crop load reduction will vary
substantially - From site to site
- Between varieties
- Across vintages
- Depending on when crop adjustment is done
- Making general conclusions may be difficult and
recommendations need to be tailored to each
situation - Often so-called crop level effects may actually
be due to shade either excess shoot density or
excess shoot vigor due to overly-severe pruning
49Crop Load ManagementScience, Belief System, or
45 Minutes of Ambiguity?