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Learn about the importance of pruning grapevines and how it helps regulate vine size, vigor, and grape yield and quality. Understand the different components of a grapevine, including buds, shoots, canes, and watershoots. Discover the significance of count nodes and the difference between count shoots and watershoots. Gain knowledge about basal buds, blind buds, and bud swell and bleeding. Get ready to explore cane pruning techniques.
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How to Prune Grapevines Part One Buds, Nodes & Shoots Tim Creagh Lecturer in Viticulture
Introduction Pruning is one of the most important operations carried out in the vineyard and is one of the most expensive and time consuming
Introduction Pruning time gives the opportunity to: • Regulate the form and size of the vine • Regulate the vigour of the vine • Regulate the quantity (yield) and quality of the grapes
It Starts in the Bud The bud contains the shoot, the leaves, tendrils and flowers, ready to burst and grow in spring A bud is found in the nodes of grapevine shoots These buds appear single but in fact, comprise at least three 'true' buds and a lateral bud
Bud Node
Shoots Tendril • In spring the main bud bursts to become a shoot Leaf • The shoot will produce the flowers that become the fruit Flowers
Shoots As well as producing fruit for this season the shoot develops the buds for next seasons growth Later on the shoots harden, turn brown and become canes
The shoot………. becomes the cane
Canes • A shoot becomes a cane after periderm formation • From these canes will come the shoots that will carry the crop for the next season • But canes will only produce fruit if they come from buds that have been left deliberately (if you can count them) • Otherwise....
They are Watershoots The difference between a watershoot and a count shoot is....
Watershoots • Count shoots from count nodes • Watershoots from nowhere
Therefore… • Pruning is a matter of leaving count nodes • Count nodes are the nodes that you deliberately leave at pruning • Count nodes are always from wood (canes) that grew in the last season • These canes come from count nodes from the previous season • They are not from watershoots
Recap…… • Nodes contain buds • The main bud bursts to become a shoot • The new shoot produces the flowers which become the fruit • At the same time the new buds are forming in the shoot • Shoots become canes when they turn brown • Only canes that come from deliberately left buds are used for pruning which are found on count nodes
Before we move on • Basal bud • A bud at the base of a cane • They don’t normally burst in the same season as buds at nodes • These can remain dormant for many years • But when they do burst they produce.... • Blind buds • Buds that don’t burst
Watershoots • Watershoots come from buds that have been dormant • But during this time they lose the fruitfulness • And that’s why they look like they come from nowhere!
One last thing! • Bud swell and bleeding • Bud swell is when the buds swell and become fluffy just before budburst
Bleeding • When a cane, spur or cordon is cut close to bud burst time the cut 'bleeds' • Bleeding is due to increased sap flow within the vine, which brings carbohydrate from the roots and trunks • It can also bleed early on in the pruning season if it rains heavily followed by warm weather