good wine for beginners

How to: Canopy Management

Updated Aug 2021

What is canopy management and why is it so important? We wrote about the spring time where there is budding after pruning and trellising in our post here. These are key vineyard duties in late Winter and Spring. As the vines start to grow and the long summer days kick in, canopy management becomes a focus.

Canopy Management definition

The canopy of a vineyard is defined as the collective parts of the grapevine’s fruit, trunk, shoots, cordons and leaves. So technically, when we covered pruning and tying down canes, that was canopy management too–albeit early stages.

The real guts of the actual managing of the canopy happen once the vine starts to grow–shoots, leaves, suckers, fruit everywhere!

pruning vineyard

Purpose of canopy mangement

The goal of managing the vineyard canopy is to bring forth the best possible grapes to be grown. During the summer, the grapes undergo a critical growth phase in their life–the build up until harvest in the fall.

Left to their own will, vines will grow all over the place; into the rows, over the trellising wire, hang to the ground, shade the fruit etc.. but there are things one can do to improve the quality of the fruit.

How to manage your canopy

Follow these tips for effective canopy management. Style will differ with every vigneron, but this is what we’ve observed and learned so far:

  • Generate airflow: As we learned from Pruning Vines in Sonoma, airflow through the vine’s canopy is key. It will reduce the amount of disease pressure like mildew and bunch rot, requiring less spraying of sulphur or other chemicals.
  • Exposing the fruiting zone: Grapes need sunlight to ripen. If they are covered in shade by leaves, they’re going to have a bad time. Thus, getting rid of the leaves in the fruiting zone will enable the grapes to have more sunlight exposure, help with airflow and also allow for anti-mildew spray to reach the grapes more easily.
  • Thinning: Too much fruit actually may not be a good thing. Balance is key in the vineyard and the vine’s limited energy is stretched too thin by too many clusters on the vine, the end result won’t be favorable. So the remedy is thinning (also known as dropping fruit). Another aspect of thinning is to get rid of any suckers and water shoots that didn’t bloom any fruit; these attachments to the vine’s base don’t really serve any purpose other than sapping energy that should be going to the grapes.
  • Leafing: Similar to abundant fruit, too many leaves can be a problem as well. Leaves are important to the life of the vine as they receive energy via photosynthesis. However, too much can block airlfow leading to higher disease pressure and provide too much shading to the fruit and
  • Tucking: This may vary depending on the training and trellising style, but for VSP (vertical shoot positioning), you want the vine’s shoots to grow upwards. In order to influence the vine to do so, you’ll need to tuck the wild shoots into the trellising wire. This will not only help with airflow, but also allow more sunlight to reach the leaves for photosynthesis.
  • Deer Decoy: If the vineyard is not fenced properly, it may fall under attack from free roaming deer. Deer don’t necessarily eat the fruit but they will munch on the leaves. By keeping a few leaves around the fruiting zone, it will allow some margin for the deer to consume their leaves without negatively impacting the plant.

Key takeaways for Canopy Management

From working at Domaine Pouillon, we’ve learned that balance in the vineyard is stressed. Too much thinning and leafing will lead to a malnourished vine. In contrast, a vine that has too many fruit clusters and leaves will have a tough time reaching full ripening and maturation.

There are many choices to make during this critical phase. Choose wisely, and you’ll set the vine up for success as we barrel toward veraison and harvest.