UC-NRLF LIBRARY OF THK UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. GIFT OF CALIFORNIA WINE MAKERS' CORPORATION Accession 87229 Class THE CULTURE OF THE GRAPE, AND WINE-MAKING; BY ROBERT BUCHANAN. APPENDIX CONTAINING DIRECTI CULTIVATION OF THE STRAWBERRY, B Y N . LONGWO R TH. SEVENTH EDITION. CINCINNATI: MOORE, WILST ACII, KEYS & CO., 25 WEST FOURTH STREET. 1861. c- Entered accorling to Act of Congress, in the year 1852, by MOORE & ANDERSON, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the District of Ohio. CINCINNATI: 0. A. MORGAN A CO., STEEEOTYPKR8, HAMMOND BT. PREFACE TO THE FIFTH EDITION. THE y&ir 1853 was the most favorable for the Grape Crop since 1848, and the yield unusually large, averaging about 650 gal- lons to the acre, from the best cultivated vineyards, and from a few, 800 to 900 gallons. The writer obtained from 5 acres, 4,236 gallons, or 847 gallons per acre. In some parts of the country, the crop was shortened by the " rot," and in many vineyards by careless cultivation; so that the average yield for the whole county did not exceed 400 gallons to the acre. In CULTURE, nothing new has been discovered within the last year. A light dressing of ashes, turned in with the first spring hoeing or ploughing, is still thought to be a valuable application, to correct acidity in the soil and in the grape. In SUMMER PRUNING, more wood should be left in dry seasons than in wet ones. In making the Wine, it is now though best not to stem the grapes, as the " tannin " contained in the stems is supposed "to be necessary, in some seasons, to clarify the Wine. The juice from the last pressing of each pressful, should be put with the inferior wine, as its weakness and astringency injures the good. MARCH 7th, 1854. fiii) 87229 PREFACE TO THE FOURTH EDITION. THREE editions of this little treatise, within a year, being required to supply the demand for it, would seem to indicate that the public interest in Grape Culture is on the increase. The author therefore deems it his duty to give the result of his own experience, and that of his fellow-members of the " Wine-growers' Association," in vineyard culture during the past year. It was found that the severe frosts of January and February, 1852 — 8° to 12° below zero — killed many of the grape buds in warm exposed situations, and several vineyards in Kentucky, a few miles south of this city, scarcely produced any fruit. The hard frosts of the 18th and 19th of March did not injure the grape buds, although many apples, such as the yellow Belleflower, were killed in the opening bud ; all the peaches, many of the pears, and most of the cherries were destroyed. The frosts of the middle of April and second week in May injured the young shoots of the vine, especially in low situations or near moisture, and in the rows near grass ; but with all these visitations from frosts, the grape crop was a very promising one until attacked by the rot, the second week in July, and subsequently the first week in August — the latter but slight. This disease appeared to affect those vineyards most, that were in low situations, or pot fully ex- posed to a free circulation of air, either from close planting or otherwise. High manuring, deep hoeing or plowing, and a want of summer pruning at the right time, it was thought, increased the liability to rot. This disease, or something like it, prevailed in many parts of Europe, last year, where it had scarcely been known before, and in the island of Madeira caused an almost entire failure of the grape crop. In this vicinity it cut off about half of the average crop, reducing the product of the whole county to about one hundred gallons per acre. Some made more, but many less than that average. It was (iv) PREFACE. observed that the poor lands and high situations suffered least. It is supposed by some that the rot is allied to the mildew, and that scat- tering flour of sulphur over the vineyard, in June and again in July, may prevent the rot, as sulphur is applied as a remedy for mil- dew, in grape-houses, with complete success. This experiment might be tried. Ashes are certainly a valuable application, scat- tered over the surface and turned under with the spring hoeing. Dr. Rehfuss strongly recommends this. Insects did but little injury to the vine last year. The one "resembling a small rose-bug" was scarce. A new woodcut, to illustrate spring pruning and summer train- ing, has been inserted in place of the old one, which was imperfect in some points. In SPRING PRUNING it is found best to omit the first tie, if the branch is too stiff to bend easily in a circle or bow. This leaves a three-quarter bow or circle. SUMMER PRUNING should be done promptly ; if deferred too late it is certainly injurious, but be careful not to prune too close. The vineyards near Hermann, Mo., are said now to amount to near five hundred acres. The liberal premiums offered by Mr. Alex- ander Kayser, of St. Louis, for the best Missouri wines, were awarded at Hermann in August last, at a large and enthusiastic meeting of the wine-growers of that vicinity. SCHUYLKILL GRAPE has been adopted by the "Wine-growers' Association," as the proper name of that heretofore known as the " Cape Grape" — Cape being a misnomer. VINEYARD MEMORANDA continued from page 55—1852. A bad year for rot; lost one- third of a full crop, but still made from five acres in bearing, 1,700 gallons wine. Sold, in December, 1,600 gallons at $1,25 per gallon. Have for sale this year, about 75,000 cuttings. The grapes ripened well, and the wine was of fine quality. Trenched two acres more for vineyard. The demand for CATAWBA WINE is far ahead of the supply, and the quality is con- stantly being improved, both by the cultivators and those who prepare it for market. Mr. Longworth's expenditures have been large and liberal, fully sustaining his well- earned title — the "father of vine culture" in this region. E. BUCHANAN. Cincinnati, ftb. 18th, 1853. PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. THE first edition of one thousand copies of this Treatise was exhausted in a few months, and a second has been called for. The present is cheerfully undertaken, with a view to add such information as may have been acquired during the last two years, on this so favorite a subject with the Author. Few changes in Grape culture within that period, however, have been found necessary. Suggestions in relation to spring and summer pruning are still under discussion, and some improve- ments in Wine-making have been adopted. Early last year a number of proprietors of vineyards, impressed with the importance of united efforts, formed themselves into the " American Wine Growers' Association," for the purpose of mu- tual instruction by a free interchange of opinions, at periodical meetings. Thus . far their labors have been eminently successful : " The Western Horticultural Review," edited with great ability by Dr. JNO. A. WARDER, is the medium through which their proceedings are given to the public. The articles on the subject of Grape culture and Wines, with the monthly Calendar for the vineyard, so carefully prepared by the Editor, will be found of great value to the vine-dresser. It is not pretended that a brief treatise like this, can do justice to a subject of such importance, but it is hoped that it may serve as a hand-book to ne^ beginners in the business, who will, of course, in the progress of their labors, study more elaborate works from abler pens. Compilations are like labor-saving machines, suited to the pres- ent go-ahead age, of Steamboats, Railroads, and Telegraphs, where time is everything. The American mind can not wait for detail, therefore the extracts from the writings of others are short^ and the original matter by the author condensed. The object of the publication at first, is explained in the preface to the former edition. CINCINNATI, March 17th, 1852. (vi) TO THE CINCINNATI HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY, THE cultivation of the Grape in vineyards, for making wine, is now so important a branch of horticulture, in the valley of the Ohio, and especially in this vicinity, that a brief Treatise on the subject may perhaps be considered useful. The one now presented, has been compiled from several valuable articles on grape culture, published within the last ten years, in horti- cultural periodicals, by able writers and practical men — members of your society; Mr. LONGWORTH, Dr. MOSHER, Dr. FLAGG, A. H. ERNST, J. E. MOTTIER, C. W. ELLIOTT, WM. RESOR, JOHN SAYERS, T. AFFLECK, and others — the greatest number being from the pen of Mr. LONGWORTH ; also from Mr. SCHUMAN'S pamphlet, published in 1845, and a book on the same subject, by JOHN JAMES DUFOUR, of Vevay, la., 1826 ; aided by the observations and practical experience of the writer. After all that lias been done, and written, grape culture and wine- making in this country, is as yet but imperfectly understood, and it is only by experience and a free interchange of opinions, that we shall arrive at a better knowledge of it hereafter. Our climate, and the native grapes we cultivate, differ so much from those of Europe, that the intelligent vine-dresser from the old world, finds he has much to learn in the new, and that a wide field is presented for observation, in which all must here work and think for themselves. At the time Mr. DUFOUR wrote, in 1826, the Cape Grape was then the only kind cultivated in the Ohio Valley, for wine. About that time the Catawba was brought into notice as a wine grape, by Major ADLUM, at Georgetown, D. C., and by Mr. LONGWORTH, in the West ; and it is now so great a favorite as to be almost the only variety planted. To these gentlemen, as public benefactors, the country owes a lasting debt of gratitude for introducing into vine- yard culture, this noble grape. (vii) Vlll PREFACE. Many improvements in grape culture, and in wine-making, have been made since Mr. DUFOUR'S day — even since the publication of Mr. SCHUMAN'S pamphlet, in 1845, only five years ago, practical cultivators have, in some particulars, adopted other modes than those then recommended ; and it is confidently expected, that within the next five years, still greater improvements will be discovered. The business is yet in its infancy, and will require long and careful nursing to enable it to reach maturity. With our present flattering prospects of success in this branch of home industry, it would be improper to close these prefatory remarks without a passing tribute to the merits of the worthy pioneers in the enterprise — the Swiss settlers of Vevay, and the German vine- dressers of our own county — who, under all the disadvantages of a climate, soil, and vines unknown to them — persevered in their efforts with patient industry, until the present favorable results have been produced. But to Mr. LONGWORTH, more than to any other man in the West, we are most indebted for our knowledge in grape culture. Mr. LONGWORTH has, within the last twenty-seven years, with unwearied zeal and a liberal expenditure of money, in numerous experiments with foreign and native grapes, succeeded in enabling himself and others, to present to the public, a" Sparkling Catawba," rivaling the best French Champagne, and a dry wine from the same grape, that compares favorably with the celebrated Hock wine of the Rhine. Several varieties of wine have been produced from other grapes than the Catawba, but with the exception of that made from the Cape — which is a red wine resembling Claret — it will require time to ascertain their value. From the Isabella, Ohio, Missouri, Norton's Seedling, Minor's Seedling, Lenoir, and Herbemont's Madeira, wines have been made of more or less nromise — samples of which may be found at the cellars of Mr. LONGWORTH, and some others. The views here given are those of many of our most intelligent vine-dressers. A difference of opinion may exist with others on some points, which time and experience alone can reconcile. R. BUCHANAN. Cincinnati, Feb. 18th, 1850. CONTENTS. THE VINEYARD. PAGE POSITION and Soil '. 9 Preparing the ground 10 Planting 10 Directions for planting Cuttings in a Nursery 12 Treatment of the Young Vineyard 12 Spring Pruning 13 Summer ditto 15 Culture 16 Diseases, Insects, and Frosts 17 Varieties of Grapes cultivated 23 Durability of Vineyards, etc 26 To restore Premature Decay in a Vineyard 27 MAKING WINE. The Wine Press 27 Gathering and Pressing the Grapes 28 Fermentation 30 Fining Wines 65 Character of the Wine 33 STATISTICS. Cost of Establishing a Vineyard 44 " " Attending a Vineyard 49 " " Making the Wine. 50 Probable Product per acre 50 Sale of the Wine 55 Wine Cellars and Houses 58 ryfumber of Acres in Cultivation in this Vicinity 59 " " Bearing... 60 Average Product to the Acre. 60 Vineyard Culture in the United States 60 American Grapes , 63 fix) CONTESTS. PAGE Analysis of Soils 65 Vineyard Culture in Australia 68 Product of the Vine in France 70 Vineyard Region in the United States 71 APPENDIX, Falsification of "Wines, by N. Long-worth 92 Fermentation of "Wines, by J. Brace 77 Fermenting on the Skins — J. "Williamson 112 Foreign Grapes, by Mr. Downing 91 Grape Seedlings, by N. Reihl .85 Grapes in Canada West 95 Grape Culture near Reading, Pa 96 Manufacture of Wine, and Rot in Grapes, by N. Longvorth 97 Manufacture of Native Wine 108 Native "Wine, by Dr. Mosher 89 Native Grapes, by N. Long-worth 104 Racking Wines, by L. Rehfuss. 75 Rot in Grapes, etc., by N. Longworth 100 Soil for a Vineyard, by J. Williamson 84 Spring and Summer Pruning, by Dr. Mosher 80 Spring Pruning — Spur system, by G. Sleath 117 Statistics of Vineyards 73 Stemming and Mashing Grapes, by J. A. Corneau Ill Temperance and the Vine 93 To the Members of the Wine Association, by L. Rehfuss 88 Vineyards about Cincinnati, by N. Long-worth 113 " in Clarke County, Indiana, by T. W. Gibson 116 STRAWBERRY. Preface 119 Culture, etc., by N. Long-worth 121 " " " 123 Report of Committee to the Cincinnati Horticultural Society 131 " << 135 Experiment, etc., by G. W. Huntsman 139 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE, THE VINEYAKD. IN establishing a Vineyard, it is a matter of much impor- tance to select the right POSITION AND SOIL. A hill side with a southern aspect is preferred, although an eastern or western exposure is nearly as good. Some have recommended the north, on account of safety from late spring frosts, but it will scarcely afford sun enough to ripen the grapes in cold, wet seasons (if the declivity is steep), and may perhaps be more subject to "the rot." Any undulating surface, if dry, is preferable to a level one. The soil best suited for a vineyard, is a dry calcareous loam — with a porous subsoil — not retentive of moisture; if mixed with some gravel or small stones, so much the better. Some prefer a sandy soil with a gravelly substratum ; as in this the grapes are less subject to rot ; the juice however is not so rich, — lacking in saccharine matter, — and in dry sea- sons the vines will suffer from the drought, shedding their leaves prematurely, and preventing the grapes from ripening well. In warm, sandy soils, the fruit-buds on the vines, if swelled prematurely in autumn, are sometimes killed by the frosts of a severe winter. Any soil underlaid by a stiff wet clay, is to be avoided, as also wet or spongy lands. No trees should be allowed to grow within one hundred feet of the vineyard, (9) 10 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. For a further illustration of this subject see Mr. William- son's letter, in the Appendix. PREPARING THE GROUND. In autumn or early winter, dig or trench the ground all over, 2 to 2-J feet deep, with the spade — this is far better than plowing — turn the top soil under ; the surface will be mellowed by the frosts of winter. Wet spots in the vineyard may be drained by small stone culverts, or by what is termed a French drain, a ditch, with some loose stones thrown into it edgewise, covered with flat ones, and filled up with the earth again. Surface draining may be obtained by concave sodded avenues of 10 feet wide, and intersecting each other at 100 or 120 feet, thus throwing the vineyard into squares of that size. This will do for gen- tle declivities ; but steep ones must be terraced, or benched with sod or stone, which is more expensive. These benches should be as broad as they can be made conveniently, and with a slight inclination to the hill, that they may be drained by stone or wooden gutters, running into the main trunks,' to carry off the water without washing away the soil. This is important, and requires good judgment and skill. PLANTING. Much diversity of opinion exists, as to the proper distance of planting the vines apart in the rows. Our native varieties, with their long joints, large foliage, and luxuriant growth, certainly require more room to grow than the short jointed vines of the Rhine. Hence it is supposed, that our German vine-dressers have sometimes erred, in planting too close in this country, — 3£ by 4 ; 4 by 4 ; 4 by 4J-, &c. For steep hill sides, 3J. by 4£, or 3 by 5 may answer, but for gentle slopes 3^- by 6 is close enough, and for level land, 4 by 7. This will admit sun and air to mature the fruit, and leave a liberal space for the roots to grow. PLANTING. 1 1 Lay off the vineyard carefully with a line, and put down a stick some 15 inches long, where each vine is to grow. Dig a hole about a foot deep, and plant two cuttings to each stick, in a slanting position, separated 6 or 8 inches at the bottom, and 1 inch at the top of the hole ; throw in a shovel full of rich vegetable mould, from the woods, to make the roots strike freely ; let the top eye of the cuttings be even with the surface of the ground, and cover with half an inch of light mould, if the weather is dry. Leave the hole at the lower part about two-thirds full, until midsummer ; then fill up. If both the cuttings grow, take up one of them the follow- ing spring, or cut it off under ground, as but one vine should be left to each stake. To prepare the cuttings for planting, bury them in the earth when pruned from the vines, and by the latter end of March, or early in April, which is the right time for planting, the buds will be so swelled, as to make them strike root with great certainty. Each cutting should contain at least four joints, and be taken from wood well ripened ; if a small part of the old wood is left on the lower end, so much the better ; cut them off close below the lower joint, and about an inch above the upper. Set out some extra cuttings in a nursery to replace failures in the vineyard. Some good vine-dressers have recommended planting with roots one or two years old, but the experience of others is in favor of planting at once with cuttings in the vineyard ; the vine being never disturbed by removal makes the more thrifty and permanent plant. Of course the planting should only be made when the ground is warm and dry, or mellow. Persons residing at a distance from vineyards, had better procure roots one year old, as the cuttings are apt to suffer from transportation. 12 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. DIRECTIONS FOR PLANTING CUTTINGS IN A NURSERY. When pruned from the vines, the cuttings should be tied in bundles of 100 or 200, and placed in a cool cellar, until the ground is prepared for planting. Dig a trench, in spaded ground, about a foot deep, slanting to the surface, the length of the cuttings. Place the cuttings 5 or 6 inches apart, the top eye just above ground. Cover the lower joints with good rich mould, and fill up with the earth thrown from the trench. Keep them clear of weeds in the summer, and in dry weather water occasionally. TREATMENT OF THE YOUNG VINEYARD. The first year, keep the ground clean and free from weeds, with the hoe ; many use the plow, as being more expe- ditious and economical, but the more careful vine-dressers who can afford it, never cultivate with the plow, using only the two-pronged German hoe, made especially for the purpose. The earth should be stirred around the young vines, two or three times during the season, to promote their growth ; superfluous shoots must be pulled off, leaving but one or two to grow, at first, and but one eventually. In the spring, cut the young vine down to a single eye, or bud ; at first, if two are left for greater safety, take off one, afterward ; drive a stake six or seven feet long firmly to each plant. Locust or cedar is preferred, but oak or black walnut, charred at the end, driven into the earth, or coated with coal tar, will, it is said, last nearly as long. Keep the young vine tied neatly to the stake with rye or wheat straw — pick off all suckers, and let but one stalk or cane grow. The vineyard must be kept clean of weeds, and the young vines hoed as before. The second spring after planting, cut down to two or three eyes, or joints, and the third year to four or five ; pinching off laterals, tieing up, and hoeing the vines as recommended SPRING PRUNING. 13 above. Replant from the nursery, where the cuttings have failed to strike root in the vineyard. The third year, the vines will produce a few grapes, some- times enough to pay the expenses of attending them. Train two canes to the stake this year, take off laterals, and keep well hoed. The vineyard having now commenced to bear, may be considered as fairly established ; and for the fourth and suc- cessive years, the following treatment is generally adopted. SPRING PRUNING. This is usually done from the middle of February to the first week in March. Some prune in January, and Mr. SCHU- MAN has recommended November and December, as the proper time. No serious injury to the vines, by winter prun- ing, has yet been discovered. The writer pruned many of his vines in November and December, last year, and they escaped unscathed through the hardest winter known in this climate for many years. Pruning, the fourth year, requires good judgment, as the standard stem, or stalk, has to be established. Select the best shoot or cane of last year, and cut it down to six or eight joints, and fasten it to the adjoining stake in a horizontal position, or bend it over in the form of a hoop or bow, and tie it to its own stake. The ties should be of wil- low. This is the bearing wood. The other cane, cut down to a spur of two or three eyes, to make bearing wood for the next season. Mr. SCHUMAN remarks in his treatise, " There are various methods of training adopted. Some tie the shoot up to the stake with two or three ties at proportionate distances. " The greater part of the German vine-planters make cir- cular bows with three ties, and another mode is to make half- circle bows. I recommend the latter as the best and proceed to describe it. 14 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. " Give the shoot the first tie on the stake nine inches from the ground, and the second, nine inches above it; then bow it over to the neighboring stake in a horizontal position, and give it the third tie to that stake, at the top of the vine." In the succeeding, and all subsequent years, cut away the old bearing wood, and form the new bow, or arch, from the best branch of the new wood of the last year, leaving a spur as before, to produce bearing wood for the coming year, thus keeping the old stalk of the vine down to within eighteen- to twenty-four inches from the ground. The vine is then always within reach, and control. The experience of the writer is in favor of the bow system; bending the top of the branch in a circular form, to within three or four inches of its stake, and fastening it with a wil- low tie, or twig, to the stake, — having made two ties pre- viously, one at the lower part, the other at the middle of the bow. From this low the crop of grapes is to be produced, and often a bearing cane for the next year. The spur will bear a few bunches of grapes, but the bearing wood, for the ensuing year, is generally trained from it. Mr. SLEATH has adopted a new method of training, which will be found in the Appendix. The best time for tying the vines to the stake is when the sap begins to swell the buds and make them look white — from the middle of March to the first week in April. Then in damp or wet weather, the bow can be formed by a slight twist of the branch, and fastened to the stake without breaking. This requires to be done carefully. See the Appendix for an excellent article on spring and sum- mer pruning from Dr. S. MOSHER, President of the Cincinnati Horticultural Society. Should a vine be lost after the vineyard is in bearing, it can be replaced by a layer from the adjoining vine, which SUMMER PRUNING. 15 is a much better mode than planting a young vine. The layers may be put down late in summer, but spring is preferred. Cultivate the yellow, and the osier willow, to make ties for the spring pruning. They will grow in any wet place. SUMMER PRUNING. Consists in removing suckers, and pinching off all lateral shoots, leaving but two stalks or canes to be trained for bearing wood the ensuing year, and pinching off the ends of the bearing branches, about the time of blossoming, some two or three joints beyond, or above the last blossom bunch ; pull no leaves off the bearing branches, and but very few from any other. As the vines grow, tie them neatly to the stakes, with rye straw (some use grass), and when they reach the top, train them from one stake to the other, until the fruit has nearly matured ; the green ends may then be broken off. If this is done too early, there is danger of forcing out the fruit- bearing buds for the next year, and of injuring the grapes in ripening. Some of our cultivators are averse to removing any lateral branches rom the fruit-bearing wood, — merely pinching off their ends. Others adopt close pruning, in summer, and even taking off some of the leaves of the bearing branches. Both these extremes, are wrong. The experience of the writer is in favor of removing such lateral shoots as appear unnecessary to the growth or ripening of the fruit — to pinch off the ends of the bearing branches two, three, or four joints beyond the upper bunch of grapes — according to the number it bears — to take off all laterals from the bearing wood intended for the ensu- ing year ; and not to break off the ends of these branches at all (as has heretofore been done about the time the grapes began to color). The leaves are the lungs of the plant, and while it is necessary to remove suckers and laterals, to throw strength into the fruit and the bearing branches for next year, 2 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. a liberal supply of leaves should be left for the maturity or both. 1. 2. 3. 4. To show spring and summer pruning, the above figures are inserted. Fig. 1. The vine second year before pruning. Fig. 2. " " third " " Fig. 3. " " fourth " pruned. Fig. 4. " " fourth " summer training. CULTURE. The vineyard must be kept perfectly clean from weeds and grass, and should be hoed twice during the spring and sum- mer. From the middle of April to the first week in May, is recommended as the best time for spring hoeing, and August for summer. The cultivator or the plow is less expensive, but the vines and roots are in danger of being injured by that mode of cul- ture ; therefore the hoe is preferred by those who can afford it. It has been recommended by some writers, to cut off the roots of the vines near the surface of the ground, and for four or five inches under, that the roots, when the vines are young, may be well established at a proper depth below. By others, this plan is thought to be injurious. The DISEASES, INSECTS, AND FROSTS. 17 majority, however, prefer cutting off the surface roots for the first three or four years. About every third year, put in manure, by opening a trench the width of a spade, and four or five inches deep. Above and near each row, throw in two or three inches of well- rotted manure, and cover up with the earth. Another plan adopted, is to run a furrow with the plow, put in manure, and cover over, either with the plow or hoe. Others, again, scatter manure over the surface, and dig it in. An intelligent cultivator, J. A. CORNEAU, remarks : " High manuring is generally admitted to be injurious to the vinous quality of the Grape ; or, in other words, it accelerates a larger growth of wood, and a more attractive looking fruit, while the more essential qualities of the grape for Wine- making, are very much deteriorated. No substance should ever be used which has a tendency to ferment, or which, in undergoing a chemical change in the soil, would form an acid or a salt of a highly stimulating nature. Vegetable manures, bones, &c., may be used to advantage." Well rotted sta- ble yard manure has been used moderately by the writer, with good effects to the plants and the fruit, and without any per- ceptive injury to the "vinous quality of the grape." Dr. L. REHFUSS, President of the "Wine Growers' Asso- ciation," strongly recommends a light dressing of wood ashes to be dug in with the spring hoeing, to supply to the earth the alkalies taken up by the Grape, and to neutralize acidity in the soil, and consequently in the Wine. DISEASES, INSECTS, AND FROSTS. The "rot," as it is termed, is the great evil, especially in cultivating the Catawba. This takes place usually in the latter end of June or early in July, Dr. WARDER says, " about the period of stoning," r "hardening of the seed," after continued heavy rains, and 18 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. hot sweltering suns. It strikes, something like the rust in wheat, suddenly, and with the same disastrous effect to the crop. Various modes of prevention have been recommended, but none yet tried have proved effectual. The cause is supposed to be an excess of water about the roots of the vine, in any clay subsoil retentive of moisture ; sandy soils with a gravelly substratum, are generally exempt from this disease. The opinions of Mr. ELLIOTT, Mr. LONGWORTH, and the Fruit Committee of the Cincinnati Horticultural Society, on this subject, are quoted. Mr. ELLIOTT, in the Horticulturist, Vol. 2, p. 314, says: " The rot for the past three years has followed excessive rains in July and August. Dr. FLAGG, two years since, found a small part of a vineyard where the rot was very slight ; (an experiment made by the writer of this Treatise), this had not been worked after the spring, and the ground was in such a state, that most of the rains passed off on the surface. Vines planted in rows eight feet apart, in one instance, were found not to be affected with rot, but very slightly. . ,. . The subject has been but little investigated, and therefore all can speculate." In the same article, page 319, Mr. LONGWORTH says : "It is of late years only, that the rot has been so destructive among our grapes ; one thing is certain, if we had little or no rain after the grapes are fairly forward, we should see but little of the rot ; certain it is, it is continued rains, followed by a hot sun, that causes us to look out for the appearance of the rot." In the able report of Dr. MOSHER, Mr. ERNST, and Mr. KIDD, the Fruit Committee of the Society for 1848, it is re- marked : " Some vineyards were injured by the wet weather in July, causing the grapes to rot and fall off : this, however, seems to have been confined to situations where the air had not a free circulation, allowing fogs and vapors to remain too DISEASES, INSECTS, AND FROSTS. 19 long upon the vines in hot weather, as well as to a tenacious, clayey soil ; on dry and more airy situations, and where the ground was thoroughly drained, the crop has been fine and fair." H. W. S. CLEVELAND, of Burlington, N". J., who has a vineyard of two to three acres, and who, Mr. DOWNING says, is one of the most reliable horticulturists in the State, recom- mends covering the whole surface of the vineyard with shavings, leaves, or coarse grass, to prevent the ravages of insects, and diseases of the fruit — see Horticulturist, Vol. 3, p. 113. — In the same Vol., p. 121: "A Jerseyman," in summer pruning, put the leaves and young stems in a trench at the root of the vines — sprinkled gypsum on them, and covered over with earth. This was done at the suggestion of Mr. DOWNING, who strongly recommends it to vine-dress- ers on the Ohio, with a request that upon trial they " report progress." And at page 161, of the same Vol., "B.," "of Chester Co., Pa.," recommends "special manures," as a certain spe- cific— having tried with success, a mixture of guano, gypsum, and wood ashes. Mr. DOWNING says to "J. D. LEGARE, Aiken, S. C.," in the same Vol., p. 255 : " We note your experiment with ashes to prevent rot, but you must not decide against it with one year's trial. It has been found effectual here at the north, when used along with gypsum." Two years ago, the writer of this Treatise tried ashes on a small scale, but without Gypsum; a trench was dug above two rows, the width of a spade, some four inches deep, and two or three inches of leached ashes put in and covered over with earth. No beneficial effect was perceived. The two rows were slightly affected by the rot, as were those adjoining. Hoeing in autumn, and not stirring the ground at all in the spring and summer, but keeping the weeds cut down, and 20 CULTURE OF THE GRAl'E. the surface smooth, that the water may not sink, but pass off rapidly, has also been spoken of as a probable remedy against rot. Some persons even recommend letting the weeds grow : to say the least of it, this would be slovenly culture. With a view to test the advantages of wide planting, and high training, in preventing the rot, Mr. WERE has planted on his farm, near Cheviot, eleven acres in the Catawba grape, twenty feet apart in the rows each way, and the vines are trained to locust stakes twelve feet high. Last year they produced fruit for the first time, and were entirely free from rot. But here it must be remarked, that the first crop, from young vines, is generally but little affected by that disease. Mr. WERE also cultivated the ground between the rows, for other purposes. In 1850 there was scarcely any rot, and crops averaged about four hundred gallons to the acre. In 1851 the frost on the second of May destroyed two-thirds of the grape-buds, and the crop of grapes, a very small one, was almost entirely clear of rot. The past two seasons were drier than the four or five preceding them. That the rot, or a similar disease of the grape, existed in the earlier ages, may be inferred from the following passage in Malachi, c. iii, v. 11 — "Neither shall the vine cast her fruit, before the time, in the field." The reader is referred to two articles from the pen of Mr. LONGWORTH, in the Appendix, for his views on this subject. Oct. 21, 1848, and Feb. 18th, 1850. The " mildew" comes earlier in the season, when the grapes are about one-fourth grown, blighting occasionally a few bunches, and sometimes only the lower end. It is neither common nor destructive. The Isabella is much more subject to mildew than the Catawba, and the Cape is seldom affected by this disease. The " speck," by some persons mistaken for the rot, and DISEASES, INSECTS, AND I'ROSTS. 21 by others called the bitter rot, is a large circular spot on the side of the grape, looking as if caused by the sting of an insect, and extending to the seed on one side of the berry, while the other is uninjured ; but owing to this wound, or speck, the juice will be bitter. This has been attributed to the action of the sun on the fruit when covered with rain or dew-drops. The vine is so remarkably healthy, and of such luxuriant growth in almost any proper soil, that diseases at the root are almost unknown here. Mr. SCHUMAN states that a white worm resembling the peach-tree worm, is sometimes found eating off the young roots of the vine, and Mr. MOTHER has also found and destroyed it — but it is rarely met with in vineyards. The Insects found most annoying, are a green worm that feeds on the vines just as the fruit-buds appear, and before they blossom, eating off the tender bunches, and doing great mischief if not promptly destroyed. The Canker, or Measur- ing Worm (of which the above may be a variety) is some- times found on the leaves and young shoots. The Curculio, so destructive to the plum, has occasionally been found on the grapes ; they can be readily shaken down on a sheet, by a sudden blow on the stake, and destroyed. If ever per- mitted to get domesticated in a vineyard, this insect would be immensely destructive. The Rose-bug, Dr. SHALER says, has been observed in some vineyards in Kentucky, but it is rarely met with here. For the last two years, an insect resembling the rose-bug, but smaller, and of the same family (melolontha) , has been discovered in several vineyards in this vicinity, eating off the upper surface of the leaf, and causing the veinous fibers left to look like a sieve. The writer destroyed those in his vine- yard, last year, by shaking them off the vines into buckets partly filled with strong lime-water. This was accomplished 22 ... CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. in a week, killing three hundred to four hundred thousand from six acres, at an expense of twenty-seven dollars. Next year they will scarcely be so numerous in this vine- yard. A large brown beetle, or bug, will frequently sting the young tender branches of the vine in summer, making a wound that subjects the branch to be broken off by strong winds. They can be watched and picked off, late in the evening or early in the morning. All horticulturists are familiar with the spring and early fall caterpillar, and of course, would not permit either to get a foothold in the vineyard. Mr. N. W. THATCHER, of Chillicothe, sent last summer to the Cincinnati Horticultural Society, specimens of a small variety of curculio, which he had found to injure his grapes, like the plum, by depositing ova. Frost. Late spring frosts have some years, but not often, been highly injurious, especially to vineyards near small streams of water, damp woods, or in cold situations. The most severe within the memory of the writer, occurred on the nights of the 26th of April, 1834; 9th May, 1838; 7th May, 1845, and the 15th April, 1849. In the three first named years, the buds had so far put out, that their loss was not replaced by the pushing out, subse- quently, of the latent or twin bud, which partially overcame the loss of the first, in the latter year, 1849. These frosts, therefore, nearly destroyed the crop, in situations near moisture. A more destructive frost than either of the above, occurred on the morning of the second of May, 1851 — destroying all the fruit, and about two-thirds of the grape-buds. This frost gave us one test, and proved conclusively, that the grape is the hardiest of all our fruits, not even excepting the apple. In warm sandy lands, with a gravelly substratum, the buds are in some years pushed forward prematurely by warm autumns, so as to be killed by severe frosts in winter. UNI VARIETIES OF GRAPES AND Out of eighty-three vineyards in this county in 1845, Dr. FLAGG reported twenty-one much injured by the frost. Hail-storms have in some years injured our grape crop, but they are generally confined to a small strip of country, and have seldom extended to more than eight or ten vineyards in this county in any one year. The leaves of the vine are a partial protection to the fruit. VARIETIES OF GRAPES CULTIVATED, ANP WINE MADE FROM THEM. 1. The CATAWBA is our great wine grape, and stands with- out a rival. Mr. LONGWORTH has offered five hundred dollars reward for a better native variety, and several new seedlings have been produced, but its equal has not yet been found. It is subject to rot. Wine; varying from a clear water color to straw color and pink ; of a fine fruity aroma ; makes an excellent champagne, and a good dry hock. Requires no sugar in fermentation, if the grapes are well ripened. In the Horticulturist, Vol. 2, p. 317, Mr. LONGWORTH states : — " Maj. ADLUM had a proper appreciation of the value of the Catawba grape. In a letter to me, he remarked : — ' In bringing this grape into public notice, I have rendered my country a greater service than I would have done, had I paid off the National debt.' I con- cur in his opinion." 2. CAPE ; this old favorite of former days, is now almost displaced by the Catawba. It is still cultivated in some vine- yards, but not extensively — a very hardy variety and but little affected by the rot. Makes a good wine, resembling claret — requires some sugar to be added in fermentation. 3. ISABELLA, a variety much esteemed in some of the Eastern States, particularly about the city of New York — where it ripens better than here. It is almost abandoned as a wine grape, and generally cultivated only for table use ; a 3 24 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. •lardy variety, subject less to rot than to mildew — in some seasons ripens badly. Wine sometimes good, and resembling a light Madeira — requires a good deal of sugar in the fermentation ; say eighteen to twenty-four ounces to the gallon of juice, or " must." 4. ELAND'S MADEIRA ; a delicious table grape, resembling the Catawba in its appearance. Too tender for vineyard cul- ture in this climate. On arbors, in sheltered situations, it bears well. 5. OHIO, or Cigar Box, is a fine table grape, bunches very large and shouldered, berries small, black, sweet, and without pulp ; does well on arbors or trellises, but will scarcely an- swer for the vineyard culture — requires long pruning. Wine ; dark red, inferior in flavor when new, but improves by age. 6. LENOIR; a black grape, bunches large and compact, sometimes shouldered, without pulp, berries small, black, sweet and palatable. Subject, in clay soils, to mildew and rot. 7. MISSOURI ; fruit black, bunches loose and of medium size, berries without pulp, sweet and agreeable. Sometimes cultivated in vineyards ; a good variety for wine. Wine; "makes an excellent wine, somewhat resembling Madeira." 8. NORTON'S SEEDLING ; bunches of medium size, compact, shouldered, berries small, purple, sweet, but with a pulp. Wine; inferior. 9. HERBEMONT'S MADEIRA ; a good wine, and a pleasant table grape ; bunches medium size, berries small, black, and without pulp. Wine ; pink or light red, resembling in flavor the Spanish Manzanilla. 10. MINOR'S SEEDLING ; a new grape of the Fox family. Fruit ; bunches medium size, berries large, pulpy, musky, and rich flavored, very hardy ; but Jittle subject to rot. VARIETIES OF GRAPES AND WINES. 25 Wine; too musky and high flavored to be pleasant, with- out mixing with other kinds. This grape will probably be found a valuable variety for the vineyard. 1 1 . WHITE CATAWBA ; a new seedling from the Catawba, but far inferior to the parent. Bunches medium size, shouldered, berries white, large, round, and pulpy — in taste like the Fox Grape. Wine ; not tested. 12. MAMMOTH CATAWBA; another new seedling, re- sembling the Catawba in color, but not so well flavored. Bunches large, shouldered, berries very large, round, pulpy — in some seasons subject to fall off before ripening. Wine ; not tested. Mr. LONGWORTH, in a letter to the Cincinnati Horticultural Society, remarks: — "I have for thirty years experimented on the foreign grape, both for the table and for wine. In the acclimation of plants, I do not believe ; for the White Sweet Water does not succeed as well with me, as it did thirty years since. I obtained a large variety of French grapes from Mr. Loubat, many years since. They were from the vi- cinity of Paris and Bourdeaux. From Madeira, I obtained six thousand vines of their best wine grapes. Not one was found worthy of cultivation in this latitude, and were rooted from the vineyards. As a last experiment, I imported seven thousand vines from the mountains of Jura, in the vicinity of Salins, in France. At that point the vine region suddenly ends, and many vines are there cultivated on the north side of the mountain, where the ground is covered with snow the whole winter, from three to four feet deep. Nearly all lived, and embraced about twenty varieties of the most celebrated wine grapes of France. But after a trial of five years, all have been thrown away. I also imported samples of wine made from all the grapes. One variety alone, the celebrated 26 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. Arbois wine, which partakes slightly of the Champagne char- acter, would compete with our Catawba. "If we intend cultivating the grape for wine, we must rely on our native grapes, and new varieties raised from their seed. If I could get my lease of life renewed for twenty or thirty years, I would devote my attention to the subject, and I would cross our best native varieties with the best table and wine grapes of Europe. We live in a great age. Discoveries are daily made that confound us, and we know not where we shall stop. We are told of experiments in mesmerism, as wonderful as the grinding over system would be ; but I fear the discovery will not be brought to perfection in time to an- swer my purpose, and I must leave the subject with the young generation. " I have heretofore wanted faith in the doctrine of French Horticulturists, that to improve your stock of pears, you must not select the seed of the finest fruit, but of the natural choke pear. I am half converted to their views. The Catawba is clearly derived from the common Fox grape. In raising from its seed, even white ones are produced, but I have not seen one equal to the parent plant, and in all, the white down on the under side of the leaf, and the hairs on the stalk, common to the wild Fox grape, are abundant." DURABILITY OF A VINEYARD. The oldest vineyard in this county is one of Mr. LONG- WORTH'S, on Baldface. It was planted twenty-seven years ago, on ground trenched with the spade two feet deep. It is still in vigorous bearing, and has nothing to contend with, but the rot in wet seasons. Several other vineyards in the county are from fifteen to eighteen, and a few, twenty years old. Dr. MOSHER in an able article on Grape Culture, in the " Farmer and Gardener," Vol. 5, p. 206, says : THE WINE PRESS. !i'7 "Vineyards planted at Vevay, in Indiana, by the Swiss, merely on deeply plowed ground, failed in fifteen years. When the ground is plowed eighteen inches deep, it may bear tolerably well for twenty years ; but a vineyard planted on ground well trenched two feet deep, and properly drained and cultivated, may be expected to last fifty or one hundred years, or perhaps more. The crop, also, is much more cer- tain when the ground is well trenched, not being so liable to suffer from droughts or rainy seasons." Mr. MOTTIER is of the opinion that fifty years is as long as a vineyard will last in this country, even with the best at- tention. TO RESTORE PREMATURE DECAY IN A VINEYARD. It has been suggested, that when the ground was prepared originally with the plow, and the vines planted too close to- gether, the vineyard might be restored to vigorous bearing, by taking up every other vine in the close planted rows, and trenching the ground for half the distance between the rows two and a half feet deep. How far the partial root pruning thus given to the vines might affect them, is uncertain. The experiment might be tried on a small scale. The old system of renewing worn out vineyards, by trenching between each row, and forming new plants from layers, is a good one ; but two or three seasons are lost in adopting that method. MAKING WINE. THE WINE PRESS Is made somewhat like a "screw cider press." An iron screw, three or four inches in diameter is used — either in a strong upright frame, or coming up through the center of the platform (the latter is the cheapest, and most simcle in 28 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. construction). A strong, tight, box platform six or seven feet square, of two or three inch plank, six or eight inches high at the sides, is wedged into heavy timbers ; and, in this, a box of one and a quarter inch boards, five or six feet square, perforated with holes near the lower edge, ten or twelve inches high at the sides (made to be readily taken apart), is placed to contain the mashed grapes. Boards to fit loosely inside of this box, and lay on top of the pile of mashed grapes (or " cheese" as cider-makers call it) and pieces of scantling to lay across to receive the pressure, complete the press. The power is applied by a strong lever attached to the nut or female screw, and the juice runs out through a hole, with a spout, in front of the platform, into a large receiving tub. N. B. Doctor WARDER suggests an improvement, adopted by Mr. RENTZ, in his wine press. Inch strips are placed on the platform, and boards perforated with holes, laid on them as a bottom for the box that contains the mashed grapes. GATHERING AND PRESSING THE GRAPES. The grapes should remain on the vines until very ripe, " dead ripe" as some express it. Pick off all decayed or un- ripe berries from the bunches, which are then bruised in a mashing tub (a vessel like an inverted churn), or passed through a small wooden mill, breaking the skins and pulp, but not the seeds. They are then emptied into the press, and the screw applied, until the pulp and skins are pressed dry, or all the juice is extracted. The outside of the cheese has to be cut off two or three times, and thrown on the top, and re-pressed, in order to extract all the juice. The juice or " must" as it is called, is then put into clean casks in a cool cellar, for fermentation. Everything connected with the making of wine, requires great care and neatness. The press, vessels and casks, must be Taerfectly clean ; and, in short, as much attention to cleanli- GATHERING AND PRESSING GRAPES. ness must be observed, as in making butter, else the wine will lose the fine fruity aroma and flavor of the grape, which is to give it character and make it sell. It is now generally admitted that stemming the grapes, is a great advantage to the wine. The writer has adopted a cheap and simple method, which, if not as mechanical as Mr. Corneau's, yet answers the purpose very well : — A wire screen of an oblong square form, with meshes of three quarters of an inch, is placed to slide on a slight frame, over a large receiving tub ; on this screen the mashed grapes are poured from the mashing tubs, — with a few vigorous slides and shakes, the pulp and skins fall through the sieve, leaving the stems on its surface. The stems comprise about one- tenth of a measured bushel of unstemmed grapes. The "pummies" (skins and seeds after being pressed) is thrown on the manure pile ; or, distilled, to make brandy. Mr. LONGWORTH says, "To insure success we must ob- serve great care in selecting the fruit. Select good sweet casks, and use cleanliness in expressing the juice, and skill in the process of manufacture and preservation of the wine. Keep it in a cool cellar, cask tight, and carefully rack the same yearly, till the wine is perfectly fine, and fit for bottling ; for wines, that have no alcohol added, require tight casks and cool cellars, to keep them sound. They are less subject to run into the acetous fermentation with us, than they are in France and Germany. To the ropiness of which they complain, our wine is not subject. It is a common saying in France and Germany, that 'a poor man cannot make good wine.' The reason is obvious. The rich man not only has more influence in obtaining favorable opinions, but he also uses more care and skill in the manufacture. The poor man must sell his wine as soon as made. The rich man retains it till it is improved by age, and never sells any under his own name, but that which proves to be of superior quality. The vintage of bad years, is sold without a name. So much de- 30 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. pends on manufacture and reputation in Europe, that wine from the same variety of grape, and the vines divided by a footpath in the same vineyard, have very different reputa- tions. The one will bring eighteen dollars per dozen, where its neighbor will not command three dollars. Many com- mence the manufacture at the lowest price, and in a few 'years, by great care and skill, command the highest." In the Horticulturist of January last, a writer from Mis- sissippi recommends the use of whisky barrels, in wine-making. Perhaps they might answer in Mississippi, but it would be a great mistake to use them here. The taste of the whisky would destroy the flavor of our Catawba grape, — which we prize so highly in our wine, — and render it unsalable. To avoid giving any extraneous taste to the wine, the casks should be at first, new, filled up with pure water, and soaked for ten or fifteen days ; then, well scalded out, and fumigated with sulphur. In using them afterward, they should be thoroughly cleansed every year, before the wine is put into them to ferment. FERMENTATION. This process as generally pursued here, is very simple. The casks are filled up within five or six inches of the bung, and the bung put on loosely. The gas escapes without the wine running over. Usually, in two to three weeks, the fermentation ceases, and the wine becomes clear; tlienj£# up the casks and tighten the bungs. In February or March, rack off the wine into clean casks and bung tight. A second, but moderate fermentation, will take place late in the spring; after that the wine fines itself, and is ready for sale ; and if the casks are kept well filled, and the bungs tight, it will improve by age for many years. Use no brandy $r sugar, if the grapes are sound and well ripened. Since the above was written an improvement has been adopted by many, in the fermentation of wines. — When the FERMENTATION. 31 must is put into the cask, and the c-isk filled within an eighth or tenth of its capacity, (to leave room for fermentation) — a tin syphon is fitted tight into the bung, with the end of the tube in a bucket of water, thus permitting the gas to escape through the water, without the wine coming in contact with the atmospheric air. Some of the strength and of the fruity aroma is thus retained in the wine, that would otherwise escape by exposure in the methods formerly pursued. The safest method of keeping this wine is in bottles, well corked and sealed, and laid on their sides in a cool place. The fewer rackings it receives, and the less it is exposed to the air, the sweeter and better it will keep ; retaining the fine aroma and flavor of the grape, and acquiring but little acidity. It will do to bottle in about a year after it is made, but two years would be better. Never bottle before the second fer- mentation. Racking but once, as here recommended, is in opposi- tion to the opinion of Dr. REHFUSS, who proposes at least three or four. The writer has tried both plans, and prefers his own, as producing a wine of less acidity than when exposed to the air by frequent rackings. The Doctor is an able chemist, and has doubtless good arguments for his theory. Further experi- ments may prove that his mode is the best. As the process of fermentation is a matter of the greatest importance in making wine, the reader is referred to the Appendix, for an able article on the subject, from the pen of Mr. JULIUS BRACE. Persons desirous of making a variety of wines from the same grape, may do so by adopting the following methods : The juice, or " must," that runs from the mashed grapes, as poured on the press, is put into one cask — that which comes from the first pressing, into another, and the juice obtained by the second and last pressings, into a third cask — the quan- tity of must in each will be about equal, and the wine different 32 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. in quality, as in the order above stated. A fourth variety may be made of a rich claret color, by fermenting in the skins ; and by a greater or less fermentation the quality may be varied. These last will be too rough and astringent, when new, to suit the public taste, but will become rich and palatable when mellowed by age. The common practice is to put all the must together in the same cask, believing that the whole of the juice of the grape is required to make a fair average wine. This has been the custom with the writer, except that the last pressing, being weak and astringent, is mixed with the must of the refuse grapes, and sold as an inferior wine — usu- ally at half price. The quality of wines differs with the seasons, a warm, dry summer and autumn are more propitious to maturing the grape than a wet one, hence the variation in wines of different vintages. 1846, 1848, and 1851 were remarkably favorable in this respect. We have much to learn yet in the art of making wines, and doubtless will be progressing in that knowledge for many years. We have a noble material to work upon in our Ca- tawba grape, and if "we do not improve, American ingenuity will for once be at fault. In the valuable work on wines by CYRUS REDDING, second edition, London, 1836, at page 42, will be found the following method of making a sweet wine, by arresting the fermenta- tion with sulphur and spirits : " In the south of France a quantity of wine is made called muet, for which the grapes are trodden and pressed at the vintage, and the wine is fined immediately, to prevent fer- mentation. This wine, or rather must, is next poured into a barrel until it is only a fourth part filled ; above the surface of the liquid several sulphur matches are then burned, and the bung closed upon the fumes. The cask is now violently shaken until the sulphurous gas is absorbed, so that none CHARACTER OP THE WINE. 33 escapes on opening the bung. More must is then added, and fresh sulphur, and the cask treated as before. This is re- peated several times, until the cask is full. This must never ferments ; it has a sweetish flavor and a strong smell of sul- phur. A quantity of proof spirit is now added, and a wine highly spiritous is the product. It is generally employed to give strength, sweetness, and durability to wines which lack these qualities." It is to be hoped that so unwholesome a compound may never be prepared and sold here under the name of wine, and that our Catawba may not be discredited by suck mixtures. CHARACTER OP THE WINE. The wine has suffered much from want of skill, and care- ful attention in making it, as well as from neglect, in not keeping it in cool cellars ; but, that it can be made good, and when so made, enjoys a high reputation both at home and abroad, the following extracts will clearly show. At the autumnal exhibition of the Cincinnati Horticultural Society in 1843, the committee, after passing judgment on the wines exhibited, remark: "The committee have great confidence in saying, that these fine specimens of pure native wines, have placed it beyond a doubt, that the time is not far distant, when our surrounding hills will be as celebrated for good wine, as any part of the valley of the Rhine." At the conclusion of a very able report by Dr. FLAGG, chairman of the same committee, May 2, 1846, an analysis of wines by Dr. CHAPMAN, is given : I. Catawba, from N. LONGWORTH'S vintage, 1845, alcohol 11.5, water 88.5 — equal 100. II. Catawba, from RENTZ'S vintage, 1845, alcohol 11, water, 89 — equal 100. III. Hockheimer, Rhine wine, seven years old, alcohol 7,5, water 92.5 — equal to 100. 34 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. IV. Red wine (Cape), P. BATE'S vintage, 1845, alcohol 9.12, water 90.88— equal 100. Showing a decided difference in favor of the American wine. The above wines were the pure juice of the grape. Mr. LONGWORTH, Horticulturist, Vol. 2, p. 318, in an article to C. \V. ELLIOT, written in 1847, remarks : " My own impression is, that in skillful hands, our Catawba will make a wine superior in flavor and aroma to the best French champagne imported, or that manufactured in London from perry, or in New Jersey from cider and green corn. The aroma of the Catawba grape continues in the wine in all its stages. "I made the first Champagne five years since. It was produced by chance, and induced me to erect a building for the manufacture, and to send to France for a manufacturer ; I shall be content, if we can always make as fine a wine by design as was then made by accident." In a communication to the Cincinnati Horticultural Society, Sept., 10, 1845, Mr. LONGWORTH remarks : "We have prejudices to overcome, 'for a prophet is not lionored in his own country.' "We become fond of the flavor of particular wines from a continued use of them, as some of our citizens have of the bilge-water taste of the Spanish Manzanilla. Our domestic wines have a flavor of their own, and with wine drinkers accustomed to the particular flavor of other wines, it will re- quire time to form a taste for them. It was so with our Ger- man population ; for a time they gave a decided preference to German wines. They now greatly prefer the domestic. " For the manufacture of a fine dry Hock, I consider the Catawba unrivaled. " But our Madeira and Sherry wine-bibbers would say, as Mr. SCHULTZ'S friends told him in Baltimore, thirty years CHARACTER OF THE WINE. 35 since, when as a new article in this country, he gave them as a great treat, some old dry Hock. He said nothing, but looked around expecting to see smacking of lips, and hear exclamations of admiration. But the universal cry was, ' What a pity, Shultz, your cider is sour !' "At a comparison of domestic wines from our different vineyards, by a dozen of Hock-drinkers, selected for the occa- sion, the gentleman who acted as chief of the judges, was a great admirer of Spanish Manzanilla ; and with a view to test their judgment, I slipped in a bottle of his favorite wine. While his brethren were tasting the wine and expressing their opinions, their leader slowly tasted each bottle, but said not a word until he had tasted the whole. He then remarked that ' he should reserve his opinion as to the best, but would promptly decide which was the worst bottle on the table,' and placed his hand on the Manzanilla. I told him I con- curred in his opinion, but he might change his mind when advised that it was his favorite Spanish wine, and from the same cask that he had always pronounced a superior article. " A gentleman from an Eastern city, a few evenings since, very gravely and sincerely gave me an instance which took place in his own presence. Their wine club had recently broil uiSed a pipe of high-priced wine, with which they were much delighted, until a conspicuous member observed that he detec\V,il a slight taste of copper — a brother member admitted a slight peculiar flavor, but insisted that it was leather. The presidiut ef the club was referred to, who promptly decided that it w?.\s a compound of both copper and leather. The debate waxed warm, and all three had their adherents, when it was decided to draw off the wine from the pipe in the pre- sence of the fcwiety. This was done, and at the bottom, im- mersed in the sediment, was found a small copper key with a short strip of leather attached to it !" Mr. LONGWORTH re- marks : "I presume the Eastern gentleman took it, for 36 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. granted that Don Quixote had never got as far west as our back woods." A gentleman in our own city, in whose judgment in wines great confidence was placed, could never be induced even to taste our domestic Hock, though a great admirer of the im- ported article. On two or three occasions I knew him to take a glass, and praise it highly ; but the moment that a smile from the host told him of his error, he backed out, readily discovered his error, and could not be induced to make a fur- ther trial. But on a certain occasion a friend invited him to dine with him, and drink a glass of superior Hock, recently sent him as a present. The bait took — the gentleman praised the wine highly, and pronounced it equal to any he had ever drank, and proved his sincerity by not leaving the table till he had two bottles under his belt ; and for the next month, never met his host without inquiring if all his fine wine was gone, and expressing a great desire to give it a second trial. After he was fairly committed, he was told that it was the na- tive Catawba. From that day he knocked under, and acknowl- edged his prejudices had blinded him." One of the most distinguished physicians and Horticulturists in the State, Dr. KIRTLAND, in his article on the cultivation of the grape, in the " Western Farmer," Vol. 3, p. 134 (1842), observes: — "The point has been satisfactorily settled, that the rich limestone formations in the south-western part of Ohio, are as well adapted to this purpose as any locality on the earth, unless it be in some volcanic regions enjoying a more uniform climate. Evidences abundant can be brought to sustain the position, that within half a century, Cincinnati will be celebrated for her 'vine clad hills.' " I look upon this subject with great interest in another point of view. During an extensive practice in the medical profession, for more than twenty-five years, I have frequently found it important to employ wine and other diffusable stimu- lants as medicines. Whatever other medical men may say or CHARACTER OF THE WINE. 37 think of the matter, I must state, that I cannot in all instances find in the Materia Medica a substitute for them ; and while I am disposed to go as far as any one,' in excluding strong drinks from the daily use of people in health, I must express my satisfaction, at finding we can produce in our own coun- try, a pure, healthy wine, well adapted to medicinal pur- poses, and far superior to the adulterated, poisonous foreign compounds, that often find their way to the bedsides of the sick, under the names of « Lisbon/ ' Madeira/ &c. &c." In the Horticulturist, Vol. 1, p. 53, Mr. DOWNING says : — " Mr. LONGWORTH of Cincinnati very obligingly sent us last month a case of American wine, the product of his vineyards on the banks of the Ohio. ' ' We have been in the highest degree pleased with these wines. They severally are the product of the Catawba, Cape, Isabella, and Missouri grapes — all native sorts. The very best is the Catawba, of which we received samples of several vintages. The character of the wine is that of excellent hock, like the better class wines of the Rhine. " We sent a bottle of this Catawba wine to one of the old- est and most respectable wine houses in this country, Messrs. BINNINGER & Co., New York. These gentlemen wrote us in reply : — ' We are very much gratified in having an opportu- nity of tasting this wine, which is the first American wine <»hat deserves the name of wine, that we have ever seen. It strongly resembles hock, and we should have pronounced it such.' " Mr. DOWNING farther says : — "These wines are entirely pure, without the addition of alcohol, and the temperance cause has everything to gain and nothing to lose, by a general production and consumption of such a wholesome beverage. This, every one familiar with the hock and claret districts of Europe, where ardent spirits are not used, will cheerfully bear testimony to. Indeed, until such wines can be produced, and afforded, as they soon will be, pure, and at low prices at 38 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. home, only a small class of persons in this country will ever kno\v what pure light wines really are ; what is sold as such by the retail dealers in the country generally, is so brandied and manufactured, as to become worse than ardent spirits itself." Dr. FLAGG, in his report to the Cincinnati Horticultural Society for 1 846, justly observes : — " I am confident that the introduction of pure light wine as a common beverage, will produce a great national and moral reform — one that will be received by our temperance brethren, ere long, as a national blessing — one that will complete the work they have already begun. The temperance cause is rapidly preparing public sentiment for the introduction of pure American wine. So long as public taste remains vitiated by the use of malt and alcoholic drinks, it will be impossible to introduce light, pleasant wines, except to a limited extent ; but just in pro- portion as strong drinks are abandoned, a more wholesome one will be substituted. Instead of paying millions to for- eigners, as we now do, for deleterious drinks, as brandy and wines, let us produce from our own hill-sides a wholesome beverage that will be within the reach of all, the poor as well as the rich." Mr. W. R. PRINCE, of New York, in his very able article on American Vineyards, in the Horticulturist, Vol. 1, p. 393, remarks : " The pure juice of the grape is an innocent beverage, grateful to our senses, the last six of which, it was kept in a dry chamber, and be- came so much improved as to be pronounced by good judges a most delicious dry wine, that would compare favorably with the very best Hock or Madeira. Twenty-four dollars a dozen was offered for it, by one who knew what constituted good wine. The pure juice of the grape alone deserves the appellation of wine — to obtain which, of an excellent quality is the grand desideratum that should engage the enlightened efforts of this society. If sugar or spirits is required to convert the juice of the grape into what is called wine, the sooner the vine-cul- ture is abandoned, the better — for we already have among us enough artificial mixtures of this class called wine — many of which, I am credibly informed, have never had the christen- ing influence of a single drop of the blood of the vine. If, in awarding a premium by this society for the best native wine of the vintage of 1847, it is intended to apply indis- criminately to all the mixtures of the produce of that year, it is difficult to perceive how horticulture is to be benefited by it. It is liberal and praiseworthy to offer rewards that will tend to encourage so important a branch of Horticulture as the vineyard — to bring its produce into a high state of excel- lence, and to make public that mode of culture and manage- ment of the vine, and that treatment of wine which shall elicit the most meritorious production and obtain the prize. I know the Society, in offering this reward, were actuated by the purest motives — to encourage horticultural improvement alone, and never dreamed of ministering to the cupidity of the most skillful inventors of compounds. That cultivator, who manages his vines in the best manner, and thereby pro- duces to this Society a pure juice of the best qualities, such as strength, fineness, aroma, and flavor, should be entitled to FOREIGN GRAPES. 91 the premium, and not he who possesses most knowledge and skill in combining mixtures. It is of incalculable impor- tance to this Society, as well as to the community at large, to know how to cultivate the vine and to manage the pure juice so as to produce the best samples of wine, which will always be sure to command the highest market value. (From the Horticulturist.) FOREIGN GRAPES. BY MR. DOWNING. Mr. TOGNO is sanguine as to the introduction of the foreign grape in this country for open vineyard culture. The thing is impossible. Thousands of individuals have tried it on a small scale in various parts of the Union ; and several per- sons— as for example, M. LOUBAT, Mr. LONGWORTH, etc., of great experience abroad or knowledge at home, joined to abundant capital, have tried it on a small scale. The result in every case has been the same ; a season or two of promise, then utter failure, and finally complete abandonment of the theory. The only vineyards ever successful in America are those of American grapes. As it is a pretty well established axiom, that the hardiness of a variety of tree or plant is not affected by grafting it on a hardier stock, though its luxuriant growth may be. promoted by it, we doubt if our correspondent will find the mildew less inclined to make havoc on his foreign grapes, when worked on our wild stocks. If he really wishes to acclimate the foreign grape here, he must go to the seeds, and raise two or three new generations in the American soil and climate. They will then get American constitutions — which no grafting, pruning, training, or manuring will give them. The only thing that he can do for them, is to cheat them into the belief that they are in the warmer parts of Europe, by putting them in a glass house. If any of our readers doubt whether grafting can enfeeble a healthy variety, they have only to try the experiment by taking that variety 92 APPE.VDJX. and grafting it for two or three successions upon unsuitable or unhealthy stocks. We do not mean, however, to assert that grafting on healthy stocks impairs the vigor of a sort — but only that any given variety, which has been propagated in this way time and again, for 100 years, is very likely, in the course of that time, to have been put upon an unhealthy stock, and hence to have lost some of its original vigor. January, 1851. (From the Western Horticultural Review.) FALSIFICATION OF WINES. As an evidence of the great importance our wine interest is assuming among the products of our country, the miserable attempt to palm off other brands at auction will show how highly ours are valued. An instance of this kind has elicited an explanation from Mr. LONGWOE/IH, in the New York Tri- bune, which is here appended : " Sparkling Catawba Wine of Cincinnati. "A friend, recently from your city, informs me that, at the request of Mr. LEINAN, a wine merchant on Front street, in your city, he sent him a box of my Sparkling Catawba wine, and charged him the invariable price here — $12; and that Mr. LEINAN expressed surprise at the price, as he had recently bought my wine at auction, in your city, at $8 per box. I have not yet been able to supply the home demand — have never sent a box to New York, or any other city, for sale. Our merchants, who sell at $12, have a commission. My wine has not only an engraved label on each bottle, but ' N. LONGWORTH, Cincinnati,' branded on the end of each cork, and my name, and the name of the wine, and Cincinnati, with a circle of bunches of grapes around it, on each bottle. My wine never will be sold at auction. I shall esteem it a special favor if Mr. LEINAN will ascertain who sent the wine to auc- tion, and write me. That he will- also compare the labels on TEMPERANCE AND THE VINE. 93 the bottles, and the brand on the bottom of the cork. I have no desire to have even French Champagne sold as my Spark- ling Catawba. A merchant of our city writes me, that he was at one of your first hotels, and called for a bottle of my Sparkling Catawba, which was brought to him. That the moment he tasted the wine, he found it had not the Catawba aroma and flavor. He examined the bottle, and found no label on it. He took up the cork, and instead of my brand on its end, found the name of a French house. From the character of the hotel, I am satisfied this was a mistake of the waiter, who perhaps had never heard of Sparkling Catawba wine. Of the flavor and aroma of my wine, each person who drinks it can judge. I claim for it one superiority over im- ported Champagne. It will be found to suit the stomach better and be much healthier. It is the pure juice of our native Catawba grape, with the addition of the best rock candy. The French champagne is made from a mixture of three or four different wines, which never can be healthy to the stomach. They say one kind is to give aroma and flavor ; another strength ; another effervescence. If true, our Ca- tawba is superior, for it contains all these properties. Inte- rest may have its influence, even in France, as one of the wines used costs three times as much as the others. I expect, next summer, to have more wine than will meet the home de- mand, and shall then send to the eastern and southern cities, to wine merchants, to be sold at private sale, but never at auction. Any person who buys it, and is dissatisfied with its quality, can return it to the agent, and receive back the full sum paid. " N. LONGWORTH. "October, 1851." (From the Western Horticultural Review.) TEMPERANCE AND THE VINE. We have long been of opinion, says the Southern Press, that the best remedy against the love of strong drink — a besetting 94 APPENDIX. sin with the Anglo-Saxon race, is the free use of pure wine. It is a remarkable fact, that in the wine districts of Europe, the people are comparatively free from the brutal habit of intoxi- cation. Among the rural population of France, Italy, Spain, etc., the wholesome light wines in common use, are considered as essential to the table as bread and meat. The same, indeed, may be said of all classes. We have heard it remarked in derision, that give a man of this class a piece of bread, a few dry figs or dates, a little sweet oil, and a boCtle of claret, and he will feast like a lord, and be happy. This mode of living is coeval with the introduction of the vine and olive of those countries ; and where a man is found indulging in the use of strong drinks, he is the subject of remark and commiser- ation, by his friends and acquaintances. A modern temper- ance reformer, would probably obtain new and valuable ideas upon the subject, by visiting Havanna. There, a temperance society, except by American newspapers, was never heard of. Yet in a population of nearly 20,000 souls, it is a rare thing to hear of a Creole or a Spaniard, who is in the habit of using distilled spirits. In regard to wines, however, especi- ally claret and Sauterne, all classes make free use of them at every meal. We find in the Horticulturist, the following sensible re- marks : " Very few Americans, except those who have traveled abroad, estimate properly the moral value of pure light wines, because pure wines very rarely find their way across the Atlantic. " As hocks or clarets contain only about eight or nine per cent, of alcohol, they are far more wholesome than coffee, and the cheap production of such wrines, will do more to de- crease the consumption of ardent spirits than any other cir- cumstance. Neither law nor morals can be brought to bear upon the present age, so as to force men to be entirely temper- ate, but the introduction of wholesome, pure light wines, at a TEMPERANCE AND THE VINE. 95 cheap rate will, as there is abundant proof in the wine dis- tricts of Europe. It is for this reason, as well as because we look upon it as a source of national wealth, that we regard the successful labors of such men as Mr. LONGWORTH, in in- troducing and perfecting the wine culture, as worthy of the highest public gratitude." Amherstburg, Canada West, March 12, 1852. R. BUCHANAN, Esq. : — DEAR SIR, — I presented your letter to Mr. JAMES COUSINS, the person on whose lands the vines and cuttings were planted, distant some two miles from here. Mr. C. says, they have so far, proved a failure owing to the extraordinarily dry season in which they were planted. In fact, all the cuttings died, and also a great part of the vines ; but there are some living, and doing well. He is of opinion, that the grape might be cultivated here to great advantage, with the exception of the foreign kinds, which generally mildew. The fruit of the Isabella and Catawba appears to ripen very well in this section of the country. The soil is clay. The winters are generally moderate, but the present one appears to be the exception to the rule, for the thermometer has stood as low as 17° below zero. If, therefore, the vines are not affected by this great degree of cold, we may safely say this part of the country would be well adapted to grape culture. The wild grape grows abundantly here (small black fruit), and I have tasted wine made from their juice, far superior to any Port we can get here. I have the honor to be, Dear Sir, Your obedient, humble servant, A. H. WAGNER, 9 96 APPENDIX. (From Cist's Advertiser.) GRAPE CULTURE NEAR READING, PA. The following letter from the Reading correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger, invites and deserves a careful perusal in this region, on various accounts : In the first place, many interesting and valuable facts for our vine growers are contributed from Berks county experi- ence. There can be no doubt that much of the character of grapes is derived from the subsoil, and the suggestion on this point, will be worth attending to. Passing from solids to fluids, I would say a few words on the cultivation of the grape vines "in these diggin's." The phrase is literary correct ; for the vineyards here are all un- dermined by diggings for iron, and their soil copiously inter- spersed with large fragments of heavy iron ore. I had no idea that such labor could be performed, as has here been ex- pended on the culture of the grape ! Mr. JOHN FEHR, our industrious vintner, of whose wines you will have received a sample, has dug down his whole vineyard to the depth of three feet, to plant the Isabella and Catawba grapes, which now yield beautifully. Some five or six hundred cart-loads iron ore had first to be removed from the soil, before the vines could be planted. The attempt to cultivate exotic grapes has utterly failed. In 1839, Mr. GEORGE LAUER imported some seventeen thou- sand grape vines, comprising nine different sorts, of the best European vines ; but they all perished from the vicissitudes of the climate. Previously, in 1831, Mr. WILLIAM TIBLER planted the Isabella grape, indigenous to South Carolina, which produces largely and is less sensitive to changes of temperature, and from which, most of the Reading wine now entering into consumption is made. The Catawba grape, from North Carolina, was only intro- duced in 1835, by Mr. GOTTFRIED PFLIEGER, but is now about MANUFACTURE OF WINE, AND ROT IN GRAPES. # io be cultivated on a large scale. The grape of this vine is more spicy than the Isabella, and the quality of the wine much superior ; but its yield is less, and its cultivation costs much more labor. The Catawba grape is extensively culti- vated in Ohio and Missouri, and is the grape from which all the better sorts of American Champagne are manufactured. It improves, like the Hock grape, for a period of thirty years, after which it declines and becomes gradually unfit for the production of wine. The vineyards must then be renewed. The Catawba and Isabella grapes resemble the German and French grapes in many respects ; but their skins are thicker and less transparent, and the interior is more pulpy, or "fleshy," as the Reading and Ohio vintners call it. Cultiva- tion will, no doubt, remedy the defect. The time of the blos- soming is about the same as in France ; but the vintage is a month earlier. Where the vintner, in Germany and France must cut the leaves to afford sun for his grapes, the American must try to shade them if he would bring them to maturity. For this reason, I suppose, nature has provided the Ameri- can grape with a thicker and richer foliage than any other grape in the world. MANUFACTURE OF WINE, AND ROT IN GRAPES. To the Wine Committee of the Horticultural Society, Cincinnati : GENTLEMEN : — Each year's experience proves, that too little neatness and care are generally observed in gathering and selecting the fruit, in pressing out the juice, and having clean, pure casks, and a cool cellar. After racking in the spring, a cool cellar is indispensable, and few if any of our common cellars, are cool enough. They are too much affected by the outward air, and all jarring from the passage of wagons, or other causes, is injurious. The casks, after racking in the spring, should be always kept full and air-tight. We espe- cially err in gathering our grapes too soon. We should never 98 APPENDIX. do this until they have reached their utmost maturity, unless they should be seized by the rot. I formerly supposed (being influenced by the opinion of foreign writers), that every object could be obtained by the addition of good sugar. Experience convinces me of the contrary. Sugar will be converted into alcohol, and give strength to the wine. But it will not give the same richness of aroma and flavor as the fruit, so ripe as to require no sugar. In some parts of Europe, to give richness to their wines, they gather their fruit and partially dry them before pressing, to carry off the watery particles from the fruit. This wine sells at a high price. Before gathering the fruit, its richness should be ascertained, as its color is no certain indication. This richness, when the maturity is the same, will vary in different varieties. To test its maturity, press out a tumbler full of must, and if you have no saccharometer, put in it a fresh laid hen's egg. If of proper maturity, the egg will then rise the size of a quarter of a dollar above the juice. If not rich, it will sink. The Catawba should, in favorable seasons, weigh from 90 to 97 degrees, by our saccharometers. Many use fresh brandy pipes, to put their must or wines in. They are destructive to the aroma and flavor of the wine. Alcohol should never be added, unless the wine be too weak to keep, and when this is done, it should be distilled from the same kind of wine. If not, you injure its aroma and flavor. Spirit is never necessary, when the fruit is matured, unless it be in a hot climate. Then it seems to be indispensable, as the following hot season brings on the acetous fermentation. An intelligent gentleman of South Carolina, Mr. GUIGNARD, and another friend, both wrote to me to this effect. So much so does the value of the wine depend on the maturity of the fruit, and great neatness in manufacture, that in buying, this winter, from a person in the vicinity of Louisville, I paid him for his new wine, three times the sum that I paid him for his wine made in the year 1848. When that was made, he MANUFACTURE OF WINE, AND ROT IN GRAPES. 99 acknowledged he was not aware of the great importance of having his fruit fully matured, and the great care necessary in separating green, decayed, and rotten grapes, and neatness in manufacture. The only object in buying his wine of 1848, was to distill it into brandy. One great advantage that our native wine will have, is its being the pure juice of the grape. In Europe, total changes are wrought in the wines in the mer- chants' wine-cellars. And we are so much the creatures of habit, that for many years we gave a preference to those wines of Madeira, that had the strong fetid flavor which they de- rived from the old goat-skins in which the must was carried from the mountains, on mules, to the cellars of the wine-mer- chants at Funchal. I yesterday had wines offered me for sale, when one of the persons made an observation, that revived recollections of a few years past. The wine of one of the persons was of fair quality, and he offered it to me at little more than half the price fixed by the other. Yet such was the quality of the 400 gallons of the latter person, that even a Jerseyman could not try to buy cheaper, and I promptly complied with his terms. Better Catawba wine I have never seen. I inquired if his grapes rotted the past season. He replied not, and that the rot in the vineyards of all his neighbors had been severe. I observed, yours must be a sandy soil, or more porous than your neighbors. He replied, a stiff subsoil of clay, the same as his neighbors. That he could give but one cause for his success. That before the rot began, his time had been so much taken up by his farm, that he neglected to hoe his vine- yard, and it was filled with grass and weeds. Finding his not to rot, while the well-hoed vineyards of his neighbors suf- fered severely by the rot, he left all standing and had a full crop, and left his grapes until fully ripe, and when he did gather them, did it from a fear of injury from frost, and thought the yield as large as it would have been had he gathered his grapes earlier. I recollect, some years since, 100 'APPENDIX. when my vineyards suffered severely from the rot, some of my lazy tenants, who left half their vineyards in grass and weeds, which escaped the rot, while the clean vineyards of their neighbors adjoining, and their own portion cleaned, suffered badly from the rot, attributed their escape to their idleness in not cleaning their vineyards. I was and am unwilling to believe this ; " But facts are chiels that winna ding, And dinna be disputed." I can scarcely believe this, for though I cannot fully believe the doctrine, that every act of an idle sinner is hateful in the eyes of his Creator, I am slow to believe that he holds out inducements to idleness. His long forbearance and mercy to idle sinners compels me to believe he shows more mercy to them, and views their transgressions with more lenity, and makes more allowance for their bumps, natural propensities, education and examples, than their more fortunate and perfect fellow-mortals.' But I would still call the attention of vine- dressers to the subject, as worthy of note. I believe each year's experience confirms the opinion, that a sandy or porous soil suffers but little from the rot. A thorough draining, in our subsoils of clay, may produce the same effect. N. LONGWORTH. Cincinnati, February 18, 1850. COMMUNICATION FROM N. LONGWORTH, Head October 2.1st, 1848, and ordered to be appended to the Report of the Committee on Fruits. TO THE CINCINNATI HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. GENTLEMEN, — I objected to the Report of our Fruit Com- mittee, in giving, as the cause of the rot in our grapes, "their location being in confined situations, not fully exposed to the air, and their proximity to orchards or woods." My experi- ence is the reverse, as regards a full exposure to the air, COMMUNICATION FROM N. LONGWORTH.*""**~ '" 101 S though I do not consider that the location, as to air, either causes or prevents the rot. Most of my vineyards at Tusculum are on a high hill, and on its sides, fully exposed to the sun and air, and facing east, west, north, and south, with no tall trees in the vicinity. Yet in all these vineyards the rot has prevailed, and this season two- thirds of the crop was lost. The subsoil is a stiff clay ; and to this I chiefly attribute the rot. Among my vines near the foot of the hill, where the ground was more porous, there was less rot ; and in the bottom, or near it, where the rain immediately sank deep in the earth, there was no rot. And this I have found to be the case at other vineyards. Where the subsoil was a compact clay, the rot prevailed. Where the subsoil was mixed with sand or gravel, or where it was porous, there was no rot. I have for the past five years believed that the land in Kentucky, on the opposite side of the Ohio, would be prefer- able, for the grape culture, to our own. The soil on that side of the river is in many situations sandy, and the rain passes freely through it. The consequence is, they supply our mar- ket with strawberries a week earlier than we can raise them on our side of the river ; and most, if not all their vineyards, are planted in soil of this character ; and I have heard of no serious loss by the rot on the Kentucky side. On inquiry of our intelligent Germans, I, find their experience coincides with mine. In their vineyards, the rot injured them the least where the ground was porous, or the water, from the decliv- ity of the ground, passes off speedily; or if the subsoil was a clay, and it was mixed with stone, which caused the water to sink speedily. One of my vineyards at Tusculum suffered but little from the rot, and this was on land where the sub- soil was a stiff, damp clay, and near to the forest. The Ger- man who cultivates it is a perfect "swoab," a very ignorant man. He, however, was able to give the reason for his escape from the rot. He " prepared his ground and planted 102 APPENDIX. his grapes just so as be did in Germany." His vineyard is on the top and sides of a high hill, descending both to the north and south. He trenched his ground, throwing up the earth from each side, making beds fifteen feet wide, with deep trenches on each side, and the trenches having a quick descent for water down the hill, north and south. On these ridges he 'planted three rows of grapes. The consequence was, that no water lay on the surface, or had time to saturate the clay beneath, but speedily passed into the trenches, and from them rapidly down the hill. On inquiry, I learned the part of Germany he came from had a subsoil of stiff clay, in con- sequence of which all their vineyards were graded in like manner. Nine-tenths of our "swoabs," in all their business and pursuits in life, must do it "just so as they did it in Germany," without any change for soil or climate ; and the result is. not always as favorable as it was with my tenant. But I would not be understood as saying, that other causes may not also operate more or less in causing the rot. One reason for believing that other causes may operate is, that previous to the last six or eight years, we had much less of the rot, yet our soil was then the same, and our rains as fre- quent and heavy. But the rot should not discourage us. After losing two-thirds of their crops, my tenants, the past season, made upward of nine thousand gallons of wine, and most vineyards escaped much better than mine, and many had no rot whatever. In Germany, our vine-dressers assure us, the crop is not more certain than with us, though they are but little troubled with the rot. Their seasons are much shorter than ours, and their crops are often destroyed by their early frosts. My wine-cooper informs me that before he left France, they had lost four crops in succession, and many of the poor, owning small vineyards, had cut them up, and planted vegetables in their place. I am informed, by intelligent Germans, that the same would be done in Germany, if the poor vine-dressera . COMMUNICATION FROM N. LONGWORTH. 103 were allowed to do it. But the vine-dressers, both of Ger- many and Spain, have a greater evil to contend with. In a season when the yield is abundant, so low is the price of wine in Germany, that if you will take two empty casks to the press, you will be allowed to carry away one of them filled from the press. In Spain the evil is still greater. Mr. SAM- UEL E. FOOTE, who was many years purchasing wine in Spain, informs me that he paid the cooper $13 for wine pipes, and the vine-dresser $5 for filling them. Mr. REHFUSS recently imported from Germany the instru- ments used there for testing the saccharine quality of the must, and the strength of the wine when fully fermented. The result surprised me. Our must this season ranged from 80 to 101 degrees. I am informed, by intelligent German vine- dressers and wine-coopers, that in Germany it ranges from 70 to 90. Many are under the impression that the grape, farther south, possesses more of the saccharine principle than it does with us. I believe this is never the case ; and if it is, it is more than counterbalanced by their vintage coming on in the heat of summer, and the grape possessing a larger portion of the fermenting principle. Very few, if any, of our wine- coopers now add sugar to the must; yet our wines, in tight casks and cool cellars, keep sound for years, without any addition. But the casks should be kept full, to guard against accident. I corresponded for several years with Mr. M'CALL, who cultivated the grape for wine, near Dublin, Georgia. He informed me that he was in the constant habit of adding from 2 to 2-J- Ibs. of sugar to the gallon of must, of the Schuylkill Muscadel (Cape) and Catawba grape; and fre- quently found it insufficient to prevent his wine from running into the acetous fermentation. I know that Mr. HERBEMONT, of Columbia, South Carolina, was in the habit of adding as much sugar to his must ; yet when his wine was offered for 104 APPENDIX. sale at public auction soon after his death, most of it was turned to vinegar, or undergoing the acetous fermentation. The pure dry wines of Germany weigh from four to seven degrees, in general. The wines of Madeira weigh from twenty to twenty-five. This is occasioned by the quantity of brandy added. In their hot climate, I believe it is necessary, to pre- vent the acetous fermentation. If not, they would not add any brandy, or not so large a quantity. — N. LONGWORTH. NATIVE GRAPES. To the Editors of the Cincinnati Gazette : — MESSRS. EDITORS. — I requested last spring, in your paper, that persons having any new variety of the native grape, would do me the favor to forward me cuttings, that I might test their quality both for the table, and for wine. The communication was extensively republished in most parts of the Union, and the result was that twenty-four varie- ties were sent me in February and March last. I grafted them, and also planted cuttings. Most of the grafts are now in fruit, and from the wood and leaf, about one-fourth of them promise to be of superior quality. All of them are new in this vicinity, but two, the Olmstead and Minor's Seedling. Both of these are Fox grapes. The fruit of the first, I have not seen ; the second, is the best Fox grape that I have seen. The pulp is unusually soft, for that family, and the grape re- markably sweet, though it does not contain as much sacchar- ine matter as some grapes less sweet to the taste. It is not a great bearer, though it bears uncommonly well for a grape of that class. The Fox grape may never be valuable for a wine grape, except to mix with others, to give aroma and flavor. I re- ceived cuttings of several varieties of Fox grapes, and the stem and leaf of most of them are so strongly Fox, that they cannot be valuable. In my boyhood, I thought this grap" NATIVE GRAPES. 105 the most delicious of all fruits, and found some that bore a fair crop. This vine is easily distinguished from all others. The leaf is like leather — thick, and of a white color on the under side, and downy, and the new wood covered with a hairy down, generally of a reddish cast. It is a great objec- tion to it, that the fruit drops on the ground as soon as it is ripe. I rank the common class as about equal to the Black Scuppernong of North Carolina (the Muscadine of the Missis- sippi), from which, it appears, a superior wine is made in North Carolina, by putting three pounds of sugar to the gallon, and sold for $4 per gallon, and from two thousand to three thousand gallons are raised on an acre. Further, a Horticul- turist there, tells us, he also makes wine from the green grape ; the same person who raises so large a quantity, Mr. ALVES, of Kentucky (formerly of North Carolina), tells me they put from one-fourth to one -third of spirits to the gallon, and sell the wine from seventy -five cents to one dollar per gallon ; a wide difference in price this. The North Carolina Horticul- turist seems learned in the manufacture of foreign wines, as he tells us that one-third of Brandy is added to Port, Malm- sey, and Madeira wines. This will be news indeed, to the European wine merchants. The black Scuppernong bears from one to four berries on a bunch, and would, in times of war, if lead be scarce, be as valuable, even when fully ripe, as the Fox grape, for bullets. The white Scuppernong, also, has a very small bunch, and is a better grape than the black. But the skin is thick, and the pulp hard ; it will never be valuable as a wine grape, unless to give to other must, aroma and flavor. Our vineyards may have produced 800 and possibly 1000 gallons on an acre, but no vineyard has averaged 300 gallons for ten years. I believe ground, with a mixture of sand, or such as will freely let the rains sink, will be less subject to rot, and average double the crop produced, where the sub- soil is a stiff clay. 106 APPENDIX. I shall be gratified to receive letters from all persons having new varieties of hardy grapes in their vicinity, describing the character of the wood and leaf, color, size, and quality of the fruit, etc. After importing foreign grapes for thirty years, from all latitudes, I have never found one worthy of cultiva- tion in open air, nor do we require them. We have native grapes of superior quality, both for the table and for wine ; and by raising seedlings from our best natives, and from a cross between them and the best foreign, we can greatly im- prove them. We have neglected our native grapes. Forty-five years since, I heard of a superior grape in the garden of Mr. ZANE, of Wheeling, found by him in a wild state on Wheeling Island. I sent for cuttings, and found the grape of no value. I heard of a person in Kentucky, who had it, and that it proved of good quality. I obtained cut- tings, and it proved to be. the Vevay, or Cape (Schuylkill Muscadel) grape. I am now satisfied that neither was the Zane grape. I, this spring, had cuttings sent me, from a vine got of Mr. ZANE, some thirty years since, and which has never got out of the neighborhood, and which I doubt not will prove of superior quality. A native grape, of different aroma and flavor, and in all respects equal to the Catawba, would be worth millions of dollars to the nation. If my correspondents do not err, some of the kinds sent me are superior. The origin of the Catawba is in doubt. Major ADLUM first brought it into notice, having found it some twenty-five years since, in the garden of a Ger- man, near Washington city. I received recently, an interesting letter from Mr. ALVES, of Henderson, Kentucky. He was born in North Carolina, and says he heard of the Catawba grape in the upper part of North Carolina, forty years ago, and that it was discovered near the Catawba river, from which it derived its name. A grape, precisely the same, is said to have been discovered in a wild state, a few years since, in Pennsylvania. I have one NATIVE GRAPES. 107 from the south-west, of the same color, aroma, and flavor, but smaller, and the vine of slow growth, and a poor bearer ; and one bearing much larger fruit, of precisely the same character, but inferior. I discovered it in the center of my vineyards, and know not how it came there. My oldest vine-dresser, Father AMMEN, has gone the way of all flesh, and I regret his end. He was a worthy old man. Some twelve years since, he lost his wife, and deeply regretted her loss. He assured me, with tears in his eyes, " she was just so good in the vineyard as one man, and he might just so well have lost his horse." He got a second wife, but she was of hasty temper, and gave the old man as good as he sent. Finally, she told him, if he would give her five dollars, she would leave him, and never see him more. " Give you five dollars !" said the old man : " I will do no such thing ; but if you go and never come back, I will give you ten dol- lars." The money was paid, and the old man was relieved of that trouble ; but one that he deemed greater came. I have heretofore said, that after being my tenant ten years, he was ruined by selling his share of the crop for eight hun- dred dollars. He cleared out ; went to the north part of the state; bought^ land, and planted a vineyard. The location was too far north. His vines were killed, and he came back a poor man, and began a new vineyard on a farm of mine, adjoining his old one, on which his son-in-law has resided since he left it. This year his vineyard came into bearing, and the old man's heart rejoiced to think that he should again be able to sit under the shade of his favorite tree, and enliven his heart with wine of his own making. But, alas ! the rot came, and blasted his prospects. He became dispirited ; which, the cholera discovering, a few days since, seized his victim. He was taken to the house of his son-in-law (for he lived alone, and I could not prevail on him to take a Frau for the third time), when they urged him to take medicine, out he refused. He was told if he did not, in a few hours 108 APPENDIX. he must die. " What I care?" said the old man, "I take none. What I want to live for ? My grapes all rotten." A few hours, and he was no more. Peace to his ashes. N. LONGWORTH. Cincinnati, July 16, 1849. MANUFACTURE OF NATIVE WINE. Gentlemen of the Cincinnati Horticultural Society : The season for our vintage is approaching, and the quality of the wine depends mainly on the period of gathering the grapes, and the care and neatness exercised in the manufac- ture, and the selection of the casks : skill has little to do with it. To make good butter, is apparently one of the most sim- ple employments ; yet not one dairy-woman in ten makes but- ter of the first quality ; while the best commands twenty-five cents per pound, the poorest has a dull sale at half price. The first error is gathering the grapes too soon. This sea- son has been a severe one on our grape crop, yet from the in- creased number of vineyards now in bearing, I believe the vintage will be greater this season than last. A late frost was very destructive in our vineyards, and the summer rot more so. From the first, vines often recover. One person informed me the frost killed all the young shoots, and his vine-dresser cleared out in despair, but that the dormant shoots put out With great vigor, and from one acre and one-third he expected to make 1,600 gallons of wine. If this prove true, the frost has to him been a blessing ; for I have never yet known 1,000 gallons to be made from an acre. If we want large crops, we must go to the fertile lands of North Carolina, where, from their famous Scuppernong, they make from 2,000 to 3,000 gallons per acre. This is truly mi- raculous. I have known a bunch of our Catawba grape, to have 150 berries, and weigh twenty-four ounces. On the Scuppernong, the yield is from two to eight berries. The price is in proportion. We add no sugar, and sell our wine MANUFACTURE OF NATIVE WINE. 109 from one dollar to one dollar twenty-five cents per gallon. They add three pounds of sugar to the gallon, and, strange to tell, make a Hock wine (which is a hard, dry wine), and sell it for four dollars per gallon. Injurious as we found the frost, the rot has been more de- structive. But the experience of this year will confirm the opinion, that the rot is occasioned by a stiff subsoil of clay, through which the water cannot pass freely. In our sandy soils there has been but little rot ; and in many, none. On our rich, deep-soiled bottoms, the rot has been less than on our side hills. The first error we commit, is gathering our grapes too soon, and before the saccharine principle is fully de- veloped. Last season, some of the must of Mr. REHFUSS, weighed 101, while that from some other vineyards weighed from sixty-five to eighty only. The best average about nine- ty-five. In Germany, superintendents have this subject in charge, in the several districts, and they name the day on which the vintage is to commence. I presume this is to pre- vent ignorant vine-dressers from gathering their grapes too soon, as they are anxious to save a loss in quantity. This creates as great an evil as it is intended to remedy. All vine- yards do not mature their fruit at the same time ; and often, in the same neighborhood, one vineyard will mature its fruit a week earlier than another. The ripest bunches only should be picked at the first vintage ; and all rotten, defective, and green grapes, carefully picked out. The grapes should not be gathered till the dew is off. A second picking should be made some eight or ten days later, when, with great care in picking out rotten, decayed, and green berries, wine equal to the first may be made. The rejected grapes from both pick- ings, will make a common wine, but will be improved by add- ing eight or ten ounces of sugar to the gallon of must. The press and casks should be clean. Even fresh brandy and Madeira wine-casks should be carefully cleansed, to take out all the taste of those liquors ; the casks placed in a cool 1 10 APPENDIX. place, where there is a circulation of fresh air, for fermenta- tion ; the bung- being left out after the fermentation com- mences, till it abates, when the bung should be put in tigkt, and a spile-hole made, and air given from it, two or three times per day, and as soon as it can be done safely, all air excluded till the wine is clear, when it should be racked off. I would sooner pay seventy-five cents per gallon for must weighing ninety-five, than five cents for one weighing seventy-five. In the manufacture of wine in Europe, in times past, the grapes were always mashed with the feet before pressing, and in many places, the same practice still continues. We have been inclined to attribute this practice to their ignorance, and want of cleanliness. I believe, however, that, like many other old customs, we now treat with ridicule, the practice was impor- tant to the manufacture of good wine. My attention was first drawn to the subject by Mr. WM. HATCH, who stated, that in manufacturing wine from the Catawba grape, where pressed with little or no mashing, the wine contained but little of the muscadine aroma and flavor. On inquiring of my manufac- turer of sparkling Catawba, I learn that the same opinion prevails in the wine countries of Europe, and in consequence, the machine for mashing the grape is but little used in France. In the manufacture of Catawba wine, it is a great object fully to develop its muscadine flavor, as it is always retained in the wine after the most perfect fermentation. I would, there- fore, recommend, even where they pass through a machine, that they be further mashed by pounding, using care not to crack the seed, or much bruise the stalks. By mashing, the pink color is, also, in part, brought out. The muscadine fla- vor adds greatly to the value of the wine, and where not fully developed, will lead to the conclusion that the wine is not pure. Where it exists in its full strength, it will always be evidence of the purity of the wine, as the aroma and flavor are peculiar, and cannot be successfully imitated. The ma- STEMMING AND MASHING GRAPES. Ill chine in use for mashing grapes, does not separate the stems from the mashed berries. I would draw the attention of our ingenious mechanics, to induce them to add such an addition to the present machine. Respectfully, Sept. 14, 1849. N. LONGWORTH. APPARATUS FOR STEMMING AND MASHING GRAPES. Latonia, February 18th, 1850. R. BUCHANAN, ESQ.: — DEAR SIR, — In a letter addressed to the Horticultural So- ciety of this city, by Mr. LONGWORTH, some time last fall, he expressed the opinion that two essential requisites were yet needed, to complete the process of making wine from the Ca- tawba grape ; one of these was a method by which the grape could be separated from the stem, and the other was to impart the peculiar perfume or aroma of the fruit to the wine. Before I had seen Mr. LONGWORTH'S letter, my father had resolved to adopt a method for accomplishing both of these objects, by a very simple process, which has been pursued by our family and others, in the vicinity of Tours (in France), for several generations past, in the manufacture of wine. The method is exceedingly simple, and is probably the only one that can be applied successfully to a large crop. Various attempts have been made, in this vicinity, to accomplish the desired object, but they have invariably failed ; the only sure method, it being supposed, was, to pick the fruit from the stems by hand : this tedious process could, of course, only be adopted with small quantities of grapes. My father's me- thod is remarkable for its rapidity, and the perfect manner in which the grape is separated from the stem ; the unu- sual excellence of our wine made by this process the last season, bearing ample testimony to the usefulness of the method. 10 112 APPENDIX. There are many who think it not only a matter of indiffer- ence whether the fruit is pressed with the stem or not, but some venture to assume that the astringent principle contained in the stem, is essential to the preservation of the wine. From all these views, I dissent, and take the ground that nothing but the perfectly ripe grape itself should be subjected to pressure : and our wine manufacturers will, I predict, find this opinion correct after they have had sufficient time to test it. The usefulness of the apparatus alluded to, depends more upon the method of using it, than upon the article itself — it being mainly a manual process, facilitated by the use of a screen of wire, so arranged that sufficient space is allowed for the operator to extend his arms freely, and with the aid of hand-pieces, the grapes are made to pass with great rapidity through the screen, entirely separated from the stem. It is difficult to describe the process on paper ; in fact, it can only be understood practically by witnessing the operation. The crushing and attrition of the grape by this method are such as to bruise and rub the skin of the fruit, without break- ing the seed, and thus impart the aroma to the wine. In addition to the stemming process, we pass all our grapes through the "rollers," in a small wooden mill, before pressing. Respectfully yours, J. A. CORNEAU. FERMENTING THE GRAPES ON THE SKINS. JOHN WILLIAMSON, a successful cultivator of the vine, who resides near New Richmond, 0., has tried the experiment for the last two years, of letting his grapes ferment on the skins, slightly, after being mashed, and before pressing. He allows them to stand in large open hogsheads, for twenty -four to thirty hours, or, until they begin to ferment, and the grapes rise to the surface. They are then pressed. Too much fermenta- tion in this state would be injurious, and give a bitter, astrin- VINEYARDS ABOUT CINCINNATI. 113 gent taste to the wine ; but a slight fermentation adds to the color and aroma. Mr. WILLIAMSON'S wine enjoys a high reputation where known, and readily commands $1,25 per gallon, whenever it is offered for sale. VINEYARDS ABOUT CINCINNATI. To the Editors of the Cincinnati Gazette : GENTLEMEN : — I was yesterday at some of the vineyards on the Ohio, below the city, and among others at the vineyard of Mr. DUHME, who, I understand, resides in the city. The location is a good one, with a favorable soil, and is, I believe, the largest vineyard in the State. It requires his personal attention. The grapes ripen badly, and a large portion of them cannot ripen at all. In some parts of Europe, where their summers are cool, they find it necessary to shorten the leading branches intended to»produce the next year's crop, and thin out the leaves, and head in the short branches, and fully expose the fruit to the sun and air, to insure its ripening. This method, in our hot climate, is often highly injurious to the plant, and destructive to the fruit. If the heading in of the leading shoots be done early in the season, the fruit-buds of the following year are thrown out. As an experiment, I one year, by successive head- ing, had the fruit of four successive years on the plant at the same time, and the fall being favorable, the second crop ripened its fruit. Where the fruit branches are frequently topped, and the wood becomes ripe, the sap ceases to flow, and the fruit cannot ripen. This is the case at the vineyard of Mr. DUHME. In our hot climate no more lateral branches should be taken from the main shoots intended for next year's fruit than to give them the necessary length. The fruit branches should be topped when in blossom, beyond the second eye from the last blossom, and after that allowed to grow without topping. In our climate, to ripen the fruit, a portion of shade is neces- 114 APPENDIX. sary, for where there is growing young wood, there is of course a full flow of sap to the fruit, without which it shrivels and drops off. This day I visited a German settlement on the Ohio, com- mencing about twelve miles above the city, and extending about four miles. The hill commences, close to the river, and rises gradually ; the usual bottom-land being on the op- posite side of the river. The soil is porous and well calcu- lated, in my opinion, for the cultivation of the grape, and nearly the whole of the four miles is occupied by vineyards, and there are also some on the top of the hill. Two of the vine- yards belong to Englishmen ; the owners of all the others are Germans. Most of the vineyards in this vicinity have suffered severely from the rot, and some vine-dressers, expecting in the early part of the season to make from 2000 to 4000 gallons of wine, will not make 100. Yet their vineyards are on the sides and tops of the hills, fully exposed to the sun and air. But the subsoil is a stiff clay retentive of moisture. These localities will, I fear, be always subject to rot, and yet the vineyards will be found more profitable than any other crop. To persons having a porous soil, I would recommend the cul- tivation of the Herbemont grape. It is a fine grape, both for the table and for wine, and perfectly hardy. It makes wine of superior quality, similar to the Spanish Manzanilla, or Mansinaella, as it is generally pronounced. This grape has a soft pulp, and resembles the best foreign table grapes. Lick Run, in our immediate vicinity, will make one of the most beautiful rural spots in the world. It will soon be a continu- ous line of vineyards. I wish some of our poets would visit it in May or June, and give it a more beautiful and appro- priate name. They may rack their brains for months, and not find one worthy of the scene. It is different on Mount Adams, which is in a double sense in connection with the heavens — its height and proximity to the great Telescope of VINEYARDS ABOUT CINCINNATI. 115 Professor Mitchel. The highest street is called Celestial street. Commanding as the view is, the name surely equals it. JN. LONGWORTH. P. S. I have just returned from a visit to the vineyard of Mr. LANGDON, on the bottom of the Little Miami, eight miles above the city, in a sandy soil. That porous soil is not subject to the rot in grapes, is exemplified here. His misfor- tune is in fact too large a crop of fruit, an unusual complaint this season. Yet he will have a poor vintage, arising from two causes, which prevent the fruit from ripening. The first and least cause is too much fruit, from leaving too much bearing wood. There was more than the vine could give a supply of sap for, in a favorable season. The second and great cause is the same as at the vineyard of Mr. DUHME. The fruit has no shade, few leaves, and but little young wood on the fruit branches, to carry sap to the grapes to ripen them. The wood is life, and the circulation of the sap stopped, not one-fourth of the grapes will ripen perfectly; many of them shrivel and drop, and many of them scarcely change color. A favorable fall will aid them. I observed in the vineyard of Mr. LANGDON, that the Ca- tawba vine is much closer jointed than in our richer land, where there is a subsoil of clay ; and one of my German vine- dressers assured me this is always the case. This would indi- cate an increased crop, and the change probably depends on the richness of the soil. An important inquiry is, will the grape, in a sandy soil, yield an equal amount of sugar ? I wish our vine-dressers to direct their attention to this subject. In some of our vineyards, they have both soils, and the ques- tion will be easily decided. The color of the Catawba grape is no certain evidence of its ripeness and richness. They are often of unusual dark color, this season, yet the juice has one- eighth less sugar. N. LONGWORTH. September, 1849, 116 APPENDIX. VINEYARDS IN CLARK COUNTY, INDIANA. The following letter, from Mr. GIBSON, will be found interesting : — R. BUCHANAN: — DEAR SIR. — Mr. A. GOODWIN, my father-in-law, yesterday placed in my hands a letter from you of January 28th, and requested me to reply to the questions therein propounded, which I take great pleasure in doing. The number of acres of grapes in cultivation in our county (Clark), is somewhere between 150 and 200, and steadily on the increase. The Catawba is almost exclusively cultivated. Those who plant a few Isabellas, generally dig them up after a few years' trial. The objection to them is that they are much more liable to the rot than the Catawba. The distances at which the vines are planted vary in differ- ent vineyards from 3 by 6 to 4 by 8 feet. Mine is 8 by 8 feet; but I know of no others planted so widely apart. The cultivation adopted is simple, and costs next to nothing. The land is deeply plowed in the spring — holes dug with a spade, and two or three slips planted in each hole — the ground is then planted in potatoes and pays for its culture — second year the same. Third year the vines are staked, plowed and hoed once or twice. I have never known manure to be applied, and most of our cultivators are of opinion, that the poorer the land the better it is for the grape. When Mr. GOODWIN first commenced the culture of the grape, he planted perhaps an acre in a very rich river bottom, and cultivated them with a great deal of care. They made enor- mous growth of wood and a fine show of fruit ; but it invari- ably rotted. I do not believe that he ever got two barrels of grapes from the vineyard. It was finally dug up and destroyed. The grape is very subject to rot in some seasons, though hardly as much so, I think, as around Cincinnati ; at least ours have escaped here, when yours were partially destroyed. SPRING PRUNING SPUR SYSTEM. 117 Vineyards planted in low valleys have generally been aban- doned. The fruit is almost always killed by spring frosts. The average quantity of wine per acre is about 200 gallons ; this, I mean, for an average of different years. I have known them to rot so badly as not to produce 50 gallons. One thing I have never yet known — a vineyard to suffer much from the rot the fourth year — the crop is always good. The juice is generally sold from the press at from 70 to 80 cents per gallon, to vintners in Louisville, Cincinnati and New Albany. My attention was called, a few years ago, to a grape which has been cultivated here for the last forty years, and is, I think, a native. It is about the size, shape and color of the Cape, but, in my opinion, superior to the Catawba, as a table grape. It is a vigorous grower, and entirely free from rot, but somewhat liable to crack when exposed to the sun. T. WARE GIBSON. Charleston, Ind., Feb. 26, 1850. SPRING PRUNING SPUR SYSTEM. The following letter on this subject will be read with inter- est by vine-dressers. Mr. SLEATH is one of our best prac- tical horticulturists. He had charge of Mr. LONGWORTH'S green-house and garden for many years. R. BUCHANAN: — SIR. — At your request I now give you the method of spring pruning which I have lately adopted in my vineyard, and which I believe to be the best. It may be called the alter- nate spur system, for want of a more descriptive name. The method is simply this : Instead of training only two canes to the stake for bearing wood, as pursued in the bow system, train three or four. Then, in the ensuing spring, cut down to two or three eyes, and train three or four canes for bear- ing the next year, from the lower bud, or that next the 1 1 8 APPENDIX. stake. This can be done by pinching in the bearing branch from the upper bud of each spur. Subsequently cut down, in the spring, each branch intended for bearing to two eyes, regulating the number of spurs, to the age and strength of the vine. To prevent the stalks from getting too high, cut back from the top, and train young wood from the lower buds. I will frankly admit that this system requires more care and better judgment in summer pruning than the old one; but I am certain it will produce more perfect fruit, which is the great object. Respectfully, G. SLEATH. NOTE TO PAGE 67. — The success at first, of the Swiss at Vevay, Ind., in vine culture, was owing to their selection of a native grape — the Cape. For several years their vineyards prospered ; but being planted on new land, in rich river bottoms, and the ground not trenched, they were much troubled by rot, and finally abandoned. Another cause of failure, was in the quality of their wine, which was made too harsh arid acid, to suit the taste of the American consumers. But few vine- yards are now cultivated at Vevay, and those on the hill-sides. The town is a Swiss village no longer. Many of the descendants of the former " vignerons," removed to other parts of the country; some settled in this vicinity, and few of those that remain, follow the occu- pations of their fathers. It has lost the charm of novelty to the west- ern traveler, which it presented thirty-four years ago, when the writer there, for the first time in his life, saw vineyards. CULTURE OF THE STRAWBERRY. PREFACE TO THE STRAWBERRY. THE following articles from the pen of Mr. LONGWORTH, on the culti- vation of this delicious fruit, will be fouiKl highly interesting and in- structive. Cincinnati has, of late years, been famous for her fine sugar-cured hams, sparkling Catawba wines, and a cheap and abundant Strawberry market. The latter has mainly resulted from the discovery, that certain fine va- rieties of the strawberry were more prolific in the pistillate than stami- nate organs, and that when beds were planted with a due proportion of male or staminate plants — say one-tenth — the crop was far more abun- dant, and the fruit finer than that produced by the old methods. When this became known to Mr. LONGWORTH. about twenty -five years ago, he at once made public this secret, possessed by a few, that all might profit by it. Our cultivators had the good sense to adopt it, and the result has been, that from the same quantity of ground, we produce more Straw- berries, in this vicinity, than in any other portion of the Union. For many years Mr. LONGWORTH was warmly opposed on this ques- tion by Eastern Horticulturists. Some of them have lately yielded to his opinions, and others are probably testing its accuracy by experi- ments of their own. The Cincinnati Horticultural Society appointed two committees, at different periods, to investigate the subject. After a careful examina- tion, both reported favorable to Mr. LONGWORTH'S position, fully sus- taining his views in almost every particular. These reports are here- with presented — the first in full, the latter only in part, for wantof room. Several valuable Seedling Strawberries have been produced by the Horticulturists in this vicinity. Mr. GEO. GRAHAM'S and Mr. MOTHER'S were favorably noticed some six years ago ; and those of Mr. D. Mc- AVOY and Mr. SCHNEICKE, exhibited last spring, created quite a sensa- tion in thp Horticultural Society. The premium of one hundred dollars was awarded to Mr. McAvoY, for his "superior" — the best of three fine varieties of his production; — it was pronounced, by the committee, better, in every respect, than any other Pistillate Strawberry cultivated in this region. SCHNEICKE'S Hermaphrodite Seedling, named "Longworth's prolific," from its size, quality, and the perfect fruit on all its blossoms from its first bearing, fcras deemed superior to any plant of that class known here, where the oest English Hermaphrodites are cultivated. CULTURE OF THE STRAWBERRY. MR. BUCHANAN : — It occurs to me, that in connection "with your publi- cation in relation to the grape culture, and the manufacture of wine, engravings of the Strawberry blossom, and a short description of their sexual and bearing character, will be highly beneficial, if properly un- derstood. Every family having thirty feet square of ground, may have an ample supply of fruit. In our best species of Strawberries, there are four distinct kinds, as to their sexual character, and this character is never changed, if each kind were cultivated for a thousand years. The last persons to believe in this difference in the sexual character of the plant, are our botanists. For it is true that the Strawberry be- longs to a class of plants, that possess both male and female organs in the same blossom. But in their wild state, and in raising from the seed, there are three kinds produced, entirely differing in their charac- ter. And in raising from seed, one may be found in many thousand plants, distinct from the former three. Of the last description, until recently, I had met with but two, the Eberlein, and Duke of Kent. The size of their fruit is too small to render them very desirable. A new Seedling, raised by one of my tenants in the Garden of Eden, (Mr. SCHNEIKE), from seed that I furnished, is of this character, and should it sustain the bearing character it has for five years (the period since it first bore fruit), it is superior to any plant of its character, or any Hermaphrodite in cultivation. It has produced each season a full crop of extra large fruit, of fine quality. The pistillate blossoms not only produce a certain crop, having staminates in the truss, but each Hermaphrodite blossom has proved perfect in both organs, and pro- duced large, perfect fruit. In this, it thus far differs from all Hermaph- rodites The famous Keen's Seedling, Swainstone, and others of that class, will not average one-fourth of a crop of perfect fruit. One of the three varieties first named above, is always perfect in the male organs, but the female organs are so defective that not one blossom in ten thousand will bear a perfect fruit, and rarely a defective one. "We call them staminate. Another of the three, always perfect in the female organs, but so defective in the male, that it is a rare occurrence for them to produce even a defective berry, without impregnation from other plants. These we call pistillates. The third one we term Hermaphro- dites. Being perfect in stamens, and more or less perfect in pistils ; these bear from one-tenth to one-third of a crop, This variation in (123) 124 CULTURE OF THE STRAWBERRF. product is owing to a better development of the pistils in favorable sea- sons. The famous Keen's Seedling, and other prized English varieties, are of this character, for it is not till recently, that they have under- stood the true character of the plant, but have adhered to the opinion of Linnaeus, that all varieties have both organs perfect, and a failure to bear fruit, they attribute to the effect of frost. The last rare variety is a plant that has, with staminate and Hermaphrodite blossoms, or Hermaphrodite blossoms only, a portion purely pistillate. Hermaph- rodites, and staminates, to a casual observer, present the same appear- ance. Where there are no insects, even Hermaphrodite blossoms require impregnation by hand. It is even said, that some kinds of plants, if not all, require particular kinds of insects to perform the impregna- tion ; that some plants, strangers to our climate, require impregnation by hand, as we did not, with the plant, import the insect designed to perform the labor of impregnation. Of the truth of this, I have no knowledge, never having had my attention drawn to it. I believe one staminate, or Hermaphrodite plant, will impregnate twenty or more pistillates. Both require watching. If you plant but one staminate to twenty pistillates, the staminate will, in two years, take entire posses- sion and root out the pistillates. They are the most vigorous, and hav- ing no fruit to exhaust them, make ten new plants, where the pistillates form one. That Hermaphrodites require impregnation by insects, or by hand, I ascertained last season and this. In my grape-house, I had, last spring, a large number of pistillates and Hermaphrodites in pots. When in blossom, no insects were stirring, and neither bore fruit. In the garden, when the plants were in blossom, it was cold, and an in- sect was rarely seen, except on the south side of a high garden wall. There my blossoms were fully impregnated, for there insects congrega- ted. I had a large number of beds of plants, commencing twenty feet south of the wall. There, not one- blossom in fifty of pistillates or Hermaphrodites, had a perfect fruit. This season, in ray grape-house, I impregnated both kinds by hand, with a brush, and now have all fully impregnated, and fruit nearly ripe. I learn from my gardener, recently from England, that they now, in forcing their Strawberries, also impregnate with a brush. To shake the pot daily would produce the same effect, and I presume, more perfectly. I would recommend to plant three beds of pistillates, then a single row of Hermaphrodites, followed by six or eight beds of pistillates, and so continue to the end of the patch. I should cut off the runners in the single rows, and not allow them to increase. A stamiuate Seed- ling may come up in a bed of pistillates. and root most of them out of CULTURE OF THE STRAWBERRY. 125 the bed, before his presence is observed. This, and the prolific charac- ter of the staminates, has led many of our first Horticulturists, and among them Mr. DOWNING, to believe that pistillate plants become sta- minate by running. For our knowledge of the sexual character of the plants, even our learned botanists and gardeners, are indebted to a thoughtless remark of the son of an illiterate market, gardener, who lost many thousands of dollars by the casual remark of his son. He made an independence by selling his strawberries from twenty-five to fifty cents per quart. The discovery reduced the price so much, that h• Committee. (From Downing's Horticulturist.) TWO EXPERIMENTS MADE TO TEST MR. LONGWORTH'S STRAW- BERRY THEORY. Taking Hovey's Seedling as a subject, I procured a bell- glass, and placed it over an entire plant which had not bloomed. The flowers expanded well under the glass, but did not produce one berry. The plant was frequently agi- tated tc "jut the pollen in motion, if there was any. I also introduced under a glass some blossom buds before they had blown. These, as they successively expanded, showed no signs of swelling. I impregnated, at different times, two of the blossoms by hand, applying the pollen from another plant with a camel's hair pencil. These two set their fruit perfectly. The pistils of the other blossoms soon turned to a dark color. These experiments were made at the north side of a picket fence, where the plants were screened from the full effects of the sun, otherwise the heat under the glasses would have been too great. These experiments prove, to my mind, very conclusively, that Hovey's Seedling will not bear any fruit unless impreg- nated by some staminate variety. And the same may be 142 CULTURE OF THE GRAPE. said of other varieties in which the stamens are obsolete. 1 have had some plants of the Hudson Bay for three years, m a position where they cannot very easily be impregnated by other kinds, during which time they have not borne one berry, while other plants of the same variety, exposed, have been productive. A difference in the formation of the flowers on different plants is not confined to cultivated kinds, but may be seen in those growing wild in the fields, the pistil- late plants of which I have often examined with a magnifying glass, to see if I could discover any pollen, but have never been able to find it ; I am forced, therefore, to believe that pistillate plants, both wild and cultivated, are absolutely devoid of pollen, and cannot, therefore, produce any fruit except when impregnated by others. I am also convinced, from observation and theory, that one kind will never change to the other by off-sets. The runner bearing the same relation to the plant producing it as a tree grown from a bud does to the tree from which it was taken. It may, then, be asked, how does it happen that there are pistillate and staminate plants of the same variety ? I answer, it is not the fact, unless they have sprung from seed, or the plants have been taken from the fields in a wild state. That pistillate plants are surer and better bearers than staminate plants, is, I think, generally true (provided, of course, that they are impregnated). And it would seem reasonable to infer that when but one of the sexual organs is complete, the other will have more strength. Plants, there- fore, that are perfect in both organs, require a higher state of cultivation. There is, however, a wide difference in the pro- ductiveness of different kinds, that are perfect in both organs, some being much more liable to blast than others. G. W. HUNTSMAN. Flushing, L. I., July 14, 1846. INITIAL FINE OF 25 CENTS THIS BOOK WILL INCRI DAY AND OVERDUE. icprrs -31971 J-OAN-&E**T tramw 10 LD21-100m-7,'40 (6936s) GENERAL LIBRARY - U.C. BERKELEY BDQQ137017 ill III! ^ Si$S!tlil pii^lp ^'iMi