Markko
Vineyard Trellis - Lake Erie
Potential for Organic Winegrowers
By Arnie Esterer Overview
Markko Vineyard started in 1968 as a winegrower to demonstrate the
potential for vinifera in the new to be Lake Erie appellation. As
a cooperator of Dr Konstantin Frank, his clones and cultural practice
were adapted to produce here in the most natural and organic environment
possible. Special attention focuses on winter survival. Then to
produce estate wines, which reveal with minimal intervention the
unique character and terrior for his five great vinifera - Riesling,
Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot Noir, and Pinot Gris. And
finally to market these wines which hopefully capture the essence
and character of each variety and vintage to the waiting wine world.
This calls for building understanding, demand, and reputation for
Lake Erie as a premium winegrowing region of the world. The primary
parameter for that requires finding the one or two grape varieties,
which can consistently produce fine to great wine.
Markko
Trellis
Easily the vine trellis and canopy management control the most vital
factors for successful grape growing. So the potential starts here
in the vineyard. The evolution of the Markko Trellis over thirty-five
years offers a promising system for Lake Erie vineyards, especially
those going organic
The early
trials started with a mid-wire Casenave pruning where the bi-lateral
cordon tied spur-cane wood up to a higher wire. The spur-cane fruiting
position used the Macon variation. But the cane tying became costly
between 1975 -1985, when severe winter injury and bud kill required
many more canes to compensate for damage. So in the early 1980's
with help from Rene Romberger at OARDC Wooster, the bi-lateral cordon
was raised to 54 inches.

With the same four spur-cane fruiting positions on the arms, it
becomes a no-tie system modeled on the French and German Sylvoz
and no-tie pendel bogen. As the buds break and shoots grow the fruiting
canes droop as determined by each cultivar's growth habit. Pinot
Gris, Riesling, and Merlot canes droop down while Chardonnay and
Pinot Noir canes come down moderately and Cabernet Frank and Sauvignon
hold almost to the horizontal plane into the row. The canopy develops
differently for each as the shoots and leaves position themselves
to the sun. Canopy management standardizes and varies only slightly
between cultivars. The higher cordon adds benefits of a warmer micro-climate
spring, fall and winter, better air flow and leaf exposure, more
ergonomic canopy management and picking zone, open foliage for better
spray penetration, and most importantly requires no tying of fruiting
canes. The only spring tying required depends on securing trunks
and cordon arms to the trellis wire.
One disadvantage of the Markko Trellis arises when the trucks and
cordons die and need replacement. This happened only once after
the winter of 1993-4 when the vineyard temperature dropped to an
all time record low -23° F on January 19. The vines grew back
to full production for '95 vintage, but the cost required cutting
out the dead trunks and arms, and then took more than the normal
man-hours for the next two to three years to rebuild the cordon.
The fall mound-up and deep snow protected the graft zone and trunks
up 20 inches.
Canopy
Management
Before pruning begins do statistical study for winter bud kill.
Use the Dr Vincent Petrucci summary of Russian winterkill categories
to establish a years pruning procedure for each cultivar if necessary.

Normal pruning calls for four cane fruiting positions with two bud
spurs each and two extra spurs in case of winter injury. Normal
pruning leaves 44 buds on 4 x 8 bud canes and 6 x 2 bud spurs. Spacing
canes 18 inches apart and to alternating sides of the trellis improves
canopy development. For weak vines leave 20 or less buds. Pruning
cuttings drop into the mound-up trench and the grape hoe buries
them when taking away the mound before bud break. After bud break
rub-off adventitious buds, unwanted succors and unfruitful shoots.
After bloom start pulling basal leaves around fruit clusters. Beginning
mid-July start hedging canopy shoots approximately 24 inches out
from the trellis and/or 9 leaves out from the last grape bunch.
If shading begins from excessive vigor or many laterals, additional
hedging benefits the crop with more air and sunlight. Hedge the
tops between 72 and 78 inches above ground and also the bottom canopy
at 18 inch up from the ground. The controlled canopy allows better
air flow and spray penetration.
Soil
& Weed Management
Under-trellis work starts in March thru April with hoe-away of the
winter mound.
This uncovers the graft, buries the prunings in the trench, levels
the floor, and disrupts the weeds. Before bloom in May the last
of the mound comes down and controls early small weeds. During late
June, July and early August, the grape-hoe undercuts weeds and loosens
the soil about 18 inches each side of the vines. The grape-hoe does
the first mound-up mid August on for final weed control before harvest.
The dual disc plow like the one at the grape branch does the final
mound-up for winter graft protection. This also leaves the trench
in which to bury the prunings from next spring.
Spring disking may be needed to level the floor after mound take
away and early cover crop suppression. Management of row middles
allows weeds and grass to grow and monthly mowing controls growth.
Bi-annual studies by Brookside Labs show soil status and recommendations
for fertilizer. For the past two years composted mulch spread down
all rows started to follow the recommendations of Dr Harry Hoitink
for more organic fertilization practice.
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