Planting Victoria Block

April 19th, 2011 | Posted in Our Stories, Prince Edward County

May 2001 Victoria Day the first vines on our farm were planted on what was to become know as the Victoria Block. Located just east of the barn that would become the winery and just north of the wonderful old house that we call home, the field, long planted to alfalfa, seemed perfect. A long field allowing for row lengths of just about a km (250 vines per row at 4ft spacing) meant efficiency and economy for the planting while the width of the field allowed for 9 foot row spacing which would give us lots of earth for hilling up with a gentle southern slope. The hedgerows were clear and the stream runs by the southern end of the field allowing for air drainage during cold episodes. Shallow intensely gravelly slightly alkaline soils (depths in this block range from about 15 to 24 inches) with highly fractured calcarous limestone seemed to indicate enough challenge to the vines to naturally limit crop loads while providing excellent drainage and heat retention. I decided to plant chardonnay and gamay in this block and after much deliberation chose clone 76 for the chardonnay and clone for the gamay.

The day before planting day was crazy with preparation as we dragged kiddie pools out to strategic shady locations along the north end of the field, then dragged the water to fill them and finally when the warmth of the day was spent carried the vines themselves out to spend the night soaking up the water in the pools and beginning the acclimatization process.

The next day proved the first example of a lesson I would have to learn over and over. I had planned a party … champagne, friends family, food all to celebrate the beginning of something wonderful. With the champagne chilling and food prepared all that was left was for the planter to arrive. Abe Weins and his wonderful machine that would take the slender twigs capped in red wax and plant them in straight rows using GPS was to have arrived early that day farming indifferent to man made holidays and begin. By noon he still wasn’t there but our guests were, rain was threatening and I could feel the sharp edges of panic poking at me. I drove up the road to the corner of Benway and Closson where Abe was planting the day before and sure enough he was still there. Things are a little behind he said, trouble changing the equipment over to the narrower rows he said, grounds pretty wet slow going he said and then looking up at the sky and the threat of rain he said if we get anymore I’m going to have to quit until it dries out some. I can’t begin to describe my feelings at that moment but I can say it was only the first of many times in my last ten years in the vineyard that I felt a sense of frustration to incredibly powerful I could taste the bitterness on my tongue. I tried again: if the rain didn’t come and if the planting went smoothly from here on in when did he think he would be arriving for set up … he said maybe just maybe mind toward the end of the day. I went home to entertain our guests with a tour of the soon to be vineyard and copious quantities of alcohol all the while praying please don’t rain. Abe did show up that day long after the last guest had gone and planted the first row of chardonnay as the sun fell low on the horizon. It was hard planting; the soil was wet and so incredibly gravelly the chucks of dirt at times would bury the tiny vines. I knew there would be weeks of work ahead to find and properly seat each vine to ensure they would thrive but still it was thrilling to see it all begin after almost 2 years of planning and dreaming. The next day was smoother and the next smoother still no party just the moan of the tractor and the occasional bang as the planter hit yet another rock ledge in the vineyard and then it was planted and Abe was gone off to another farm to begin the whole process again. I must have prayed pretty hard that Victoria Day though because it did not rain again in the County until the end of August turning out to be one of the worst drought years the County has seen. I worked for weeks setting each vine in place, the old universal tractor broke, the weeds started growing long before the vines did and the rest of the summer is a blur memories of trading my children beach time for weeding time, early morning spraying with the backpack sprayer, trailing behind a water tank when the tractor finally did come back trying to water the struggling young plants. A whole new life began for me and my young family that summer. We called the delicate process of seating the vines stomping and due to the very vigorous nature of that particular activity I quit going to the gym too tired some days to do much more than make supper and fall asleep in my jeans only to wake up with rocks stuck to my face. Dad used to go out to the vineyard and find a weedy spot and just sit and dig them out. By September all the young plants lost their leaves and we began to try and hill them up a process which took us 3 full months to master due in no small part to the wetness of the fall; all I wanted for Christmas that year was the vines hilled up. I think we finished Christmas eve. At the end I was humbler, I was wiser and I was much fitter. Somehow despite everything I think I fell in love that summer!

Spring is coming

March 11th, 2011 | Posted in Our Stories, Prince Edward County

waiting for the sun

Looking out the window today as the March rain pelts down eroding the hills we so carefully made last fall it feels like spring is coming. It will be here soon and with it the need to uncover the buried canes as quickly as possible. This year I think more important than ever because of the rather severe temperatures we experienced in January and February. If I was a glass half full kind of girl I would note at this point that pruning will be easier as we anticipate taking off everything above the snow line. The crew arrives in a few weeks and before they get here we have to replace the stolen copper piping from their little brick house. Do I sound bitter I think I am in a way I hadn’t really ever thought about home as being a dangerous place this winter has taught me otherwise. Now the winery has a new alarm system and our lives must integrate yet another code. But I digress… spring is coming and life will spring back into these barren fields and time will fly with work and worry as we begin another round with Mother Nature our eleventh growing grapes but the battle has been fought on this farm for over 200 years now; we are merely the current combatants.

Aug. 21-a sunday morning coming down

September 1st, 2010 | Posted in Ontario wine, Prince Edward County, Updates, local

After a crazy week 4:30a.m. – 4:30 p.m. daily, I take a moment to relax.  My dog Victor Newman is finally calm and I’m  able to enjoy some meditation time.  Instead of thinking about harvest specifics (which I’m almost sick of and harvest isn’t even here yet,) I think about life and all it’s cyclicle beauty.  I face west in homage of the current season in the cycle of life/nature.  It’s an exciting one, it’s a rewarding one.  Together with nature, we humans in the fruit industry are about to work the hardest we will work all year.  The plants are about to hand over their offspring.  They will then reflect and wait for the long hibernation that is less than 4 months or a quarter cycle away.  Their work is finshed, ours is just beginning…Lucky plants!

                      -ADAM-

Whats New at The Grange: Vineyard Notes

May 17th, 2010 | Posted in News

Whats New at The Grange
Vineyard Notes from Adam
The crew arrived on the 6th of April and began work on the 8th officially. The vineyard seems to be a few weeks ahead both the vines and the work: the hills have begun the slow process of coming down and the wires already lifted. Pruning is started and going well lots of wonderful buds to choose from out there. The radius arm on the grape hoe is hard at work bringing down the hills between the plants and though we are probably tempting fate it does look like we are setting up for a nice long growing season… however we also just filled all the propane tanks for the inversion fans, Which are currently set to fire at -2 celcius.
Cross your fingers for us!

May Update from Caroline

May 11th, 2010 | Posted in Updates

The fans have been running for 2 nights now and am I starting to get a little unfocused It all seems a little desperate the fans whirling like army helicopters fading in and out as they spin on their towers…… It was amazing really on the drive home from the train station at 12:30 tonight crossing the bridge it was four degrees and as I came down the hill into the big swamp it dropped 3 degrees …. at first I thought it was just a cold spot but by the time I reached mountainview and started down highway 2 toward Hillier it dropped another degree ….. the thermometer on my dash reading 0 and flashing a warning about ice….. crossing over the township line into Hillier the temperature dropped another degree flashing -1 as I turned onto Closson Road. I knew the fans were running because my youngest son Quinton had called earlier to tell me and i had had the task of waking Mike for the second night in a row,,,,,,,,, There was a little rise in temperature at the corner of Chase and Closson the thermometer reading 0 briefly before dipping again to -1. I rolled down my window to see if i could here the fans hoping they were running but at the same time hoping there was something wrong with the readings from my car…….. But I heard them whirring frantically in the night coming down the driveway of the house the reading rose to +1 and I headed in to change for what I knew was going to be a very long night….. It always amazes me how much more slowly the hours pass at night ……..