
February, 2008 - Kinkead Ridge Vineyard Spray Program
This is the ninth iteration of the Ohio version of a spray program developed
over a period of eight years in Oregon. The program has been changed to respond
to the generally higher disease pressure and multiplicity of disease types
encountered in Southern Ohio.
Last summer was one of the driest and hottest on record. Some late season rain eased drought pressure on the vines, but made it possible for botrytis to appear. Still is was a year of low disease pressure and so I am only fine tuning the existing program for this year.
Elite, Pristine and Dithane (Manzate) continue to be the mainstays of this program. I cut copper back to one last spray in order to work Pristine into the late season mix. This seems to have had some beneficial effect on fruit rot. Fungicide chemistry is alternated as much as possible to minimize the risk of the development of resistance. Also recent work suggests that excessive copper can reduce aroma components in white wine.
Resistance management has become a major concern as Pristine has now lost its effectiveness on downy mildew in many Eastern vineyards. Strobilurions such as Abound, Sovran, Flint & Pristine (partly) are losing effectiveness nearly everywhere. Use these "silver bullets" with care.
Now, a few comments are in order: First, realize that this program addresses the
growing of vinifera, not hybrids, which are generally more disease resistant. My site is planted at
moderate to high density (7-1/2 ft. rows) and shows low to moderate disease
pressure. If your site characteristics are similar and you achieve good spray
coverage, then your results should be satisfactory. You may note that I
reference an air blast sprayer in the program. While I realize that these are
not cheap, I know of no inexpensive way to get the coverage necessary to keep a
mature vinifera vineyard clean under adverse weather conditions in Southern
Ohio. Finally, good cultural practices such as shoot positioning and leaf
removal in the fruit zone greatly aid in disease control.
Insecticides are needed to control Grape Berry Moth (GBM)
and Japanese Beetle, as well as other pests. Scouting to identify target
populations is useful in order to determine spray timing. I use Malathion 5EC
tank mixed with the May 31st and June 16th fungicide sprays. I use Sevin
XLR Plus on August 8th for GBM and as required for Japanese beetles.
Neither of these products are restricted use.
2008 Spray
Program Schedule (19 weeks)
|
Approx. |
Spray |
Rate/ |
Cost/ |
Sprayer |
Spray |
|
|
May 5 |
Mix 1 |
40 gl. |
$10 |
hydraulic |
Even |
|
|
May 18 |
Mix 1 |
50 gl. |
$12 |
hydraulic |
Even |
|
|
May
31 |
Mix 2 |
50 gl. |
$23 |
airblast |
Even |
|
|
June 16 |
Mix 2 |
50 gl. |
$23 |
airblast |
Even |
|
|
July 3 |
Mix 3 |
50 gl. |
$24 |
airblast |
Even |
|
|
July 21 |
Mix 4 |
50 gl. |
$25 |
airblast |
Even |
|
|
Aug. 8 |
Mix 4 |
50 gl. |
$24 |
airblast |
Even |
|
|
Aug. 27 |
Mix 3 |
50 gl. |
$25 |
airblast |
Even |
|
| Sept. 7 | Mix 5 | 50 gl. | $25 | airblast | Fruit zone only | Optional: Eliminate if there is low disease pressure |
|
Sept. 15 |
Mix 6 |
50 gl. |
$8 |
airblast |
Even |
Total fungicide program cost $199/ac.
Note: Magnesium Sulfate has apparently solved my deficiency caused fruit rot problem and improved overall vine health and winter hardiness.
FORMULATIONS:
MIX 1: 6 lbs. Manzate 75 DF or Dithane, 8 lbs. Sulfur DF (micronized), 2 lbs. Solubor DF, 4 lbs. magnesium sulfate, & 12 oz. Nufilm P per 100 gallons solution.
MIX 2: 8 oz. Elite 45DF, 6 lbs. Manzate 75 DF or Dithane, 4 lbs. Sulfur DF, 6 lbs. magnesium sulfate, & 10 oz. Nufilm P per 100 gallons.
MIX 3: 22 oz. Pristine & 8 lbs. magnesium sulfate per 100 gals.
MIX 4. 8 oz. Elite 45DF, 6 lbs. Captan 50 WP, 8 lbs. magnesium sulfate & 8 oz. Nufilm P per 100 gallons.
MIX 5: 36 oz. Scala SC per 100 gals.
MIX
6: 3 lbs. Kocide 3000 per 100 gallons.
NOTES:
NOTE 1: My rows are spaced 7-1/2 feet apart. Higher (or lower) density plantings may require adjustments to spray volumes (i.e. rates).
NOTE 2: Mixes 1 and 2 may burn shoot tips if temperatures soar into the 90s shortly after spraying. Mix 5 may burn leaf margins if heavy continuous rain occurs after spraying.
NOTE 3: The Solubor in Mix 1 raises the solution PH considerably, making Mix 1 incompatible with PH sensitive materials such as Captan, and Sevin.
NOTE 4: No Sulphur is sprayed after fruit-set and no Captan is applied within 35 days of harvest. This keeps fungicide residues from influencing fermentation.
NOTE 5: Potential micronutrient deficiencies of Magnesium, Boron (Solubor), Sulphur, Copper (Kocide), plus Zinc & Manganese (Manzate) are addressed by this program. Don't add Magnesium Sulfate unless you have a deficiency.
NOTE 6: Most insecticides are compatible with Mixes 2, 3, and 4. Check to be sure. Exception: Malathion 5EC is not compatible with Mix 3.
NOTE 7: Micronized DF Sulfur apparently varies in quality. Kumulus is allegedly better than Microthiol which is better than Thiolux. All are vastly better than simple wettable sulfur.
Spot
Spraying Guide
Fungicidal:
#1
Rubigan EC at 2cc/gallon plus Manzate 75 DF or Dithane at 2/3 oz. (18
g.)/gallon.
Herbicidal:
Total
KILL.
#1: Roundup Weather Max at 1-1/2 oz./gallon.
#2:
Roundup Weather Max at 1 oz./gallon plus MCPA or 2-4-D Amine at
3/4 oz./gallon.
I
use this for most of my intra-row spot spraying.
Broadleaf only:
#1: MCPA or 2-4-D Amine at 1-1/2 oz./gallon plus surfactant at 2/3 oz./gallon.
Note: Vinifera is more tolerant of MCPA than it is of 2-4-D. The same is
unfortunately also true for blackberries and poison oak, among others. MCPA does
work well on thistles and field bindweed.
Ron
Barrett,
Kinkead Ridge Vineyard /
4288 Kinkead Road / Ripley, OH 45167 /937-392-1178 / www.KinkeadRidge.com