Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Harvest

Glossary of Vineyard Tending Terms:

bird netting: a net which is placed over the grapevines in a continuous feed without cutting it to fit the rows (penalty for cutting: the Wrath of Mom) for the purpose of trapping birds for the cats and border collie to chase and catch.  (Incidental benefit is that the netting prevents the birds from eating  3/4 of the grape.)


hedging: a) daily stroll up and down the aisles dressed in Easter finery and strappy high heels, waving hedge trimmers at the vines (source:  commercial for Saks--or was it Macy's?)  b) drudge work of trimming back rampant grapevines which seek daily to recreate that gut-wrenching final hand-holding scene in the old black and white film "Last of the Mohicans" across the aisles.

actual attire with live grasshopper (not jewelry)

netting platform: a metal contraption that attaches to the back of the tractor with a flat place for standing, a hoop to hold the bag containing the bird netting, and a boom or arm with two hoops for feeding the netting out over the rows of grapevines.  Along with netting for one acre of vineyard, the platform costs the equivalent of two years' profit.


verizon: when the grapes start turning purple indicating that "The Birds" are about to do a Hitchcock on the vineyard.
verizon
                                                                            

So what They said about bird netting was that once it was on, you were done with everything except spraying and praying until harvest.  A few weeks of relief from the daily grind during the height of summer.  Hallelujah.  That's what they said, and by golly, that's what Mom and I were determined to believe.

While we were finishing the hedging so we could get the net on, I said, "That net's going to be tough to get off."

Mom said, "The vines stopped growing sooner last year."

"What?" I was confounded.  Cabernet vines stop growing?  Maybe in October.  Mom and Dad planted the damned cabernet because they were a "vigorous" vine.  The reason the no work in the vineyard from verizon to harvest sounded so good to me was because of the vigor of those vines.  Vigorous is now one of my favorite cuss words meaning something akin to "royal pain in the ass."

"They always slow down after verizon, and we stop hedging in early August."

"We stop hedging when they harvest, Mom."

"At least it will give us a break."


Putting up the netting was a snap.  (Ha.)  It only took four of us: me to drive the tractor, Victoria to stand on the platform and feed the netting out of the bag and through the loops on the boom and Susan and Robert to walk behind, spreading the net out and draping it over the vines.  Snap.  Four hours of snap, and I was doubly determined to be done until harvest, when we'd take the net off the day before the pickers came.

A week later, Susan told Mom, "The wind blew the netting off the vineyard."

Mom looked out the window and said, "No.  The vines are just growing through it."

"Oh.  That's going to be fun to take off."

Every day, I walked by the vineyard on the way to help Mom take care of Dad, and thought, "Oh, that's going to be a bitch."

So what did we do about it?  Mom sprayed.  We prayed.  That's what they said to do.  I was praying that the vines really would stop growing.  Soon.  Before it was impossible to take the net off.

Robert
Grape harvest always, always, always takes place in August, usually the same weekend as the TICA South Central Regional Show and Banquet.  I usually miss the show because of the harvest.  When the Regional was in Austin, I did both harvest and banquet!  This year I actually planned to miss the harvest and go to the Regional in LaFayette, Louisiana.  Well, the grapes couldn't have me missing it, so harvest was about 2 weeks late.

Susan
When I got home from Louisiana, Mom told me that now They said that we were supposed to go through the vineyard daily fluffing up the netting so the vines didn't grow through the holes and entangle the net.  She would pay me $10 an hour (my going rate for shredding the fields) to help trim the vines off the top of the net before harvest for three or four hours a day.  Mind you, one hour in the vineyard is plenty of work for me, let alone for my 75 year old mother with her bad knees.  But we did the time.

"Why do I always make mistakes?" Mom said.  "I make new ones every year, but there's always something.  In another twenty years, I should have this down."

"Oh, I can just see us out here in twenty years, Mom.  I'll be the one in my seventies needing a walker.  You'll be 95."

We finished with a day to spare.  Well, of course we just thought it was a spare day.  Turned out to be the day we should have put the platform on the tractor because naturally that fifteen minute job took over an hour.

Even though Mom and I had put in the grueling hours it took to get it ready, taking the netting off was still not a snap.  I have decided that the only snap around here would be if we changed the name of the place from River Ridge Ranch and Vineyard to Murphy's Law Happens.  Now that would be a snap.  Snap.

Below, the bored tractor driver tries to entertain herself which draws a chorus of objection from the rest of the crew: "No texting while driving!"   She replies, "I'm not texting!  I'm posting on FaceBook." 



Next year's warning label:  "Do not read warning labels while operating tractor."

Patrick
It took five of us this time, with Victoria's boyfriend Patrick helping on the platform to pull the netting through the hoops.  We were supposed to have the netting off the day before harvest, but Susan's husband had an auction (Charlie is an auctioneer) on Saturday, and their projected arrival time of 3:00 to help with the netting turned into twice later than the usual two hour tardniess.  By the time the shredder was off the tractor and the platform was on, we had about a half hour of daylight left.





We worked through dusk.  "Do you want flashlights?" I hinted to Susan.

"Do you have one?"  She asked with a definite note of hope in her voice.

"Yeah, they're in the house."

Victoria
"Oh."  We worked through full dark.   Susan and Robert had to stop about every five feet to untangle the net from the rebar ties.  I could see because the tractor had lights, but they couldn't.  So I went to the house and got flashlights.  We were going so slow that we quit after another two rows, hoping that we could keep ahead of the pickers in the morning.

That didn't happen either.  Harvest time was set for 6:30 in the morning, when the earliest hint of light allows limited vision.  The pickers showed up at five.  They were only a row behind by the time we got back to it, and they caught up with us, and passed us.  They lifted the net and draped it on the top of the vines to pick underneath.  This made it a heck of a lot easier to take the netting off--definitely the reason we finished at the same time as the pickers (as opposed to an hour later).  Susan said, "Next year, we're taking the net off after they pick."

The harvest is in.  The grapes are done.  Until it all starts over again.

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