The cover crop is thriving due to intermittent rains and sunny days. Temperatures are in the 50s during the day, and 30s at night. Frost just about every night/early moring.
Let’s hope for one of those years that is easy to farm. No telling what it will be as of now.
Well we’ve crossed .80" with this storm. We’ve had some robust showers since morning. Sun is out now but sure wouldn’t get far from cover quite yet. Hopefully more on the way.
Loving the rain and the very cool weather down here. The vines were definitely ‘dormant’ - certainly a good thing. I was surprised to see someone already beginning pruning - seems a bit early, no?
Many of the larger ranches/vineyard management companies need to start in January in order to get all vineyards pruned well before budbreak. A small ranch like mine can get a crew in later, because it can be done so quickly and the crew can move on to other jobs.
Welcome to the party Grant. Would love to have a steady stream of info from Oregon. Yep, you guys getting all the rain as this f_cking high pressure dome pushes these storms north.
My irrigation pond is empty. It’s never been this dry in 20 years with this vineyard. I don’t think the soil is moist past a few inches deep, so I’m a long way from being ready to start the growing season and a long way from having any runoff to collect. I’ve been saved by late rain before, but, right now, this is pretty grim.
Dude, you just voiced everything I’ve been thinking about the last two months. I don’t know if it makes me feel better that others are losing sleep like me. While walking Zip today I was trying to think back to '77-78 (going from memory) when California lived the first modern day severe drought.
Almost crying tonight while the Pacific northwest gets pounded by more rain and even flood watches in some places. Meanwhile poor old Cali is begging for some of those problems.
Casey, that first modern day drought you’re referring to was 1975-76 thru 1976-77, a severe two year event, which has since been eclipsed twice. 2014-15 was the fourth and final year of the worst drought in memory. Sierra Snowpack was only 5%, right on the heels of a dismal 25% snowpack the year before.
We are approaching the half way point in our water year in just a few days, with no winter storms forecast for the next week in Northern California. Rainfall here in Sonoma County is only 35% of average. The Napa River at Tubbs Lane was dry last Thursday, even after an inch of rain fell on Monday. We certainly could use a miracle late Winter and Spring, similar to Water Year 1974-75, when February and March saved us with a 150% Sierra Snowpack. Or the Miracle March of 1991 when parts of West Marin County received 20 inches of rain. Perhaps we will get lucky again!