Days of Wine and Roses for Growers
State Vineyards Can't Grow Grapes Fast Enough to
Meet Wineries' Demand
 
This
vineyard at Point Lookout is the hard work of Joe
and Nancy Dick who have been at this endeavor on the
fields surrounding their St. Michael's Manor Bed and
Breakfast for twenty years.
ST. MARY'S TODAY photo
By KENNETH R. FLETCHER
Capital News Service
ANNAPOLIS (Sept. 9, 2007)
- Frank Cleary watched last week as a worker clipped
red grapes from a vine under the morning sun and
dropped them into a white plastic bin.
The rows of grapevines
surrounding Cleary would be at home in California,
but the humid air and thick green forest nearby
placed the vineyard at Friday's Creek Winery in
Southern Maryland.
The grape harvest on the Owings
farm was five years in the making and something that
Cleary, and other grape-growers in the state, hope
will become increasingly common.
"Demand is going to grow faster
than the grape supply," said Cleary. "We are selling
it as fast as we can make it."
The explosive growth in
Maryland wineries has led to a demand for
Maryland-grown grapes that state farmers have not
yet been able to meet, even though state vineyards
are producing more every year.
Since 2002, Friday's Creek has
added thousands of vines in its 10-acre vineyard.
After five years of waiting for the vines to mature,
this will be the significant harvest.
But while the winery is now
finally able to use its own product, Cleary said
Friday's Creek will still be buying frozen grape
juice from places like New York and California for
years to come.
For every ton of grapes
Maryland vineyards sell, local wineries are forced
to buy 1.5 tons from out of state, according to
Bruce Perrygo, coordinator of the Maryland Grape
Grower's Association.
Friday's Creek is part of that
wave of new wineries: The number of Maryland
wineries has tripled from 10 in 2001 to 30 today,
according to the Maryland Wineries Association.
Maryland vineyards have grown
as well, from 212 acres of grapes in 2001 to an
estimated 513 acres today. But many new vineyards
are also wineries and don't sell their grapes,
Perrygo said.
"We are in a significant grape
deficit," said Ken Korando of Solomons Island
Winery. "If the wineries grow in any appreciable
size, the likelihood of catching up anytime in the
next 10 years is pretty slim."
Maryland is promoting
viticulture in the state by providing grants to help
grape growers. Since 2005, when the Governor's
Advisory Commission on Maryland Wine and Grape
Growing was formed, the state has allocated close to
$400,000 in funding toward research, promotion and
expansion of Maryland wineries and vineyards.
The money goes to funds like
the Capital Vine Grant, which so far has provided
$65,000 to help 27 grape growers buy vines, said
Kevin Atticks of the Maryland Wineries Association.
The funding also supports a
viticulture expert and plant pathologist at the
University of Maryland who provide free advice to
grape growers and research the best types of grapes
for the region. The state is even developing a map
that will show the best areas for wine growing,
based on factors like elevation and soil type.
Starting a vineyard is not
cheap and requires specialized skills for planting,
pruning and harvest. After an initial large
investment for vines, farmers must wait years for
the first crop. The labor-intensive harvest is
almost always done by hand.
Though many varieties can be
grown successfully here, Maryland is not the perfect
location for a vineyard. High humidity causes
mildew, which requires spraying. Birds and deer
damage fruits and vines, despite nets and high
fences designed to keep them out.
"We are not California. We
can't depend on having a bone-dry summer," said Dick
Penna, chair of the wine and grape growing advisory
commission.
This summer's drought has
actually been a boon for vineyards, concentrating
sugars to make ideal wine grapes. In wetter years,
rain causes fruit rot during the harvest.
Because of their deep roots,
grapes need less water than traditional crops and do
not require as much fertilization.
Grapes have other advantages:
Once vines are planted they can remain productive
for more than 30 years, and because fields do not
need to be plowed and planted annually, there is
less erosion and runoff.
Grapevines can also grow on
slopes and poor soil unsuitable for other crops. The
state is promoting it as a good additional crop for
farmers who have a few acres that would otherwise go
unused, Penna said.
The high demand for Maryland
grapes also means high prices. Some varieties can
fetch up to $1,500 per ton, with several tons
produced per acre under optimal conditions, Penna
said.
Rob Plant, owner of Blue Wind
Gourmet in St. Mary's County, believes that the
demand for local wine will only keep growing.
"There is actually a market for
the product . . . These guys are falling short, they
want more growers," said Plant. "It's just waiting
to explode."
|