Veraison is progressing very quickly now. We may be harvesting in the next few days. The kite is flying nicely and seems to be doing its job. Let's hope that between the cats, the donkeys and the kite, the birds will be kept away.
A chronicle of our preposterous journey to grow wine grapes and make wine in the west of Ireland, where the mountains come down to the sea along the Wild Atlantic Way.
Veraison is progressing very quickly now. We may be harvesting in the next few days. The kite is flying nicely and seems to be doing its job. Let's hope that between the cats, the donkeys and the kite, the birds will be kept away.
The forecast was pretty reasonable. Warm and humid, with some models predicting light rain for a time in the morning with a short burst of heavy showers. Instead, we got a long day of heavy showers, with thunder and lightning scaring people off the Bay. And heavy rain is coming in overnight and into tomorrow. I hope it doesn't dilute the grapes too much. Veraison is moving along quickly now.
The wine news out of France is desperate though. French vineyards have suffered the worst damage in decades with heavy frost coming after an early spring warm spell and some regions getting lots of rain causing mildew fungus. Champagne yields may be down by more than 35%, and other regions will be down close to 30%. Burgundy-Beaujolais could be down by 50%. Horticulture is a crap shoot.
The vineyard was quite dry |
We have had a long dry spell and yesterday it finally rained. And it rained quite a lot in Mayo. You can hear the trees breathing a sigh of relief. They had already started dropped their leaves. With the ash dieback disease, forestry is suffering in Ireland. We don't need more pressure on the canopy.
We have been watering the gardens but not the vineyard and not the rewilding area. Our rain catchment and pond were getting very low and now have been topped up. The grapes had not increased in size since the last time I posted but now I expect them to plump up. We've got another dry spell coming over the next few days, so I am hoping they won't get too diluted. The Azores high has been parked solidly over Ireland for weeks.
During the rainy weather, we went to work on the polytunnel again. We still have not found a suitable eating grape for the tunnel. We did, however, manage to install the third and last raised bed. Still need to fill it with compost, but I've got a layer of seaweed at the bottom. Alex is planning a strawberry bed as well. It's all coming together.
Sunrise with blue skies |
July was the earth's hottest ever recorded. Here the average temp in July was 17.5 - warmer than the prior 4 years by 1-2 degrees.
In fact, scientists have said that the record heat in the Pacific Northwest was thought to be impossible yet it happened. Fires, floods, rain at the summit in Greenland - all historically significant events. And it's happening much faster than anyone thought. In fact, it feels like we've passed the tipping point. Heaven help us if we have.
Our rainfall total for August was relatively normal although it felt like we had weeks without rain which we did. When it rained, it rained more heavily so the patterns have changed.
Hurricane Ida which made landfall at New Orleans still caused catastrophic flooding in New York and New Jersey and Pennsylvania. The subways in NY had to all be shut down due to flooding. Thousands lost power and Ida was only a TS when it reached that far. But it held more water than hurricanes used to.
I spread out the gravel which looks very nice - three loads so far. We need one more load to complete the floor out the door and to top up in the greenhouse below. I really like it.
The automatic watering system is working fine so we don't have to worry about not being here. The tomatoes, courgettes, broccoli, beans, spring onions, hot peppers, cucumber, kiwi and leeks are doing well. The spinach and arugula have come up but no mange tout. None of the seeds I planted anywhere came up. I think it was a defective batch.
We had to move potted plants outside as they were cooking inside and still have to water them daily by hand, along with the rest of the garden. I think it hasn't rained in about two weeks and won't rain until this coming weekend. The composter I bought is doing a nice job. I'll have fresh compost in a few weeks.
What's left to do is:
Spreading out the gravel |
Looking good. |
Living with the space where the new bed will go has caused us to change our minds. It will now go in line with the other two. |
Tomatoes! |
Beans courgettes, hot peppers, etc |
The steps |
The threshold |
The beast, the sink, and the organizer |
I love the raised beds. It makes the weeding a pleasure. |
The living quarters shaping up |
The working quarters still have a few things pending. |
Stuff is growing well |
Now I can take a break and relax. |
Lo and behold, veraison, the changing of berry colour, is underway. The Ronda grapes are looking fine. Bigger than last year already and already turning a lovely red.
The Solaris are once again disappointing. Some have formed grapes, others withered into tiny black balls. Alex thinks they were not pollinated and wants to move a hive into the vineyard. But as grapes are self-pollinating, will that help.
Anyway, it's looking promising, or more like hopeful. Just this drasted drought getting in the way.
Looking neater |
Suddenly, everything started growing exponentially. The mild temperatures, gentle rain, and light winds produced ideal conditions. The vines shot up and out making it difficult for Alex to mow. When I started tying the vines up to the supports, I found two issues:
Dead primaries killed by tape |
Surprise! Tiny Pinot noir grapes on one vine. |
Solaris grapes getting plumper |
The audience |
Friends getting a tour |