originally posted by MLipton:
What is overcropping? asked jesting Chauvet
originally posted by maureen:
Speaking of overcropping and its salutory effect on terroir - when I say Truchot was an old fashioned winemaker in all the best - and arguably worst - senses of the word, I am of course referring primarily to his overcropping. Of course, he had old vines, which kept down yields somewhat. But he never tried to limit them otherwise and I think it helped make his wines transparent.
Overcropping is a particularly loaded term, Maureen. If you're talking about dry-farmed vines planted on well-drained, poor soils and if they're not clones chosen for their vigor, does lack of green harvesting necessarily lead to overcropping? I suspect that no more than a few generations ago, few vignerons purposefully reduced their crop in a normal year, yet good wines were made even before 1982 (believe it or not!)
Mark Lipton