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JoieFarm is a 5-acre property located on
the Naramata Bench in the Okanagan Valley, British Columbia.
In 2007 we planted our farm over from apples and pears to
Gewürztraminer and Moscato Giallo, a clone of yellow
Muscat from the Northeast of Italy. The vines will be in production
in time for the 2009 vintage. With our home block we have
chosen to take a long-term approach to the health and sustainability
of our property. We are interested in building the property
literally from the ground-up and establishing long-term resistance
to pest and diseases within our vines. We have embarked on
our vineyard project with a preventative approach, focused
on soil.
The superiority of grapes grown in well-maintained
soils seems clear to us at JoieFarm. Simply put – soil
that is rich in organic matter is able to avoid erosion and
sustain diverse life at a microbial level. A lack of soil
life means the soil will lose its capacity to directly trap,
mineralize and store adequate levels of nutrients in stable
humus. Instead, this will have to be done through the addition
of inputs. A well-balanced soil produces drought and disease
resistant plants able to produce balanced, flavourful grapes.
We see ourselves as “soil farmers” rather than
“grape farmers.” Moreover, as winemakers who now
grow grapes, making better wines is inextricably linked with
our own sustainable growing practices.
Soil
maintenance is an age-old practice that is founded on the
basic logic of “nutrients out/nutrients in.” Cover-cropping
with perennial white clover helps us to both fix nitrogen
and control moisture within the vineyard. Companion planting
oats and beneficial flowers, within our tractor alleys, allows
for a diversified area for beneficial insects above ground
and helpful microbial life, below ground. By alternating our
mowing schedule, mulching under the vines, composting our
winery waste and then spreading it back into the vineyard
we are able to remediate our soil after years of conventional
agriculture in this area. As our vines grow into production
we aim to compliment our soil conditioning with a canopy management
approach that will take advantage of the constant afternoon
breeze we see on the Naramata Bench. This will allow us to
use minimal, but well-timed, sulphur in the vineyard for mildew
control, replacing the need for constant chemical spray cycles.
In planting our vineyard in the spring
of 2007 we learned that viticulture is not a textbook practice,
it is a process of constant observation. In order to do so
it requires that we walk our vineyard on a daily basis so
that we can respond most effectively when a problem is in
its beginning stage rather than waiting until it becomes full
blown. This dedication to site-specific problem solving coupled
with constant research and reading allows us to achieve a
balance between respecting old-world agricultural approaches
and being open to modern technology which makes vineyard work
easier and often more effective. |