• Vine Tears, the cry of life

    If we say that with the pruning of the vine, everything ends, with the tears of the vine, life begins.

    Pruning as the beginning of weeping

    From the month of November, after the harvest, and when the vine loses its leaves, pruning begins. A process in which shoots, branches and herbaceous parts are cut.

    Pruning on woody parts (shoots and branches) is called dry pruning, while pruning on herbaceous parts (branches, leaves or bunches) is known as green pruning.

    Pruning is a meticulous process that must be carried out by expert hands in order to do a correct job on the vineyard, thus controlling growth and production, something that directly influences the locality of the wines, but also the longevity of the vineyard. The more expert the hands, the more life we will give to the vineyard.

    “Did you know that at Bodegas Horola our vines are between 80 and 100 years old?”

    When the grapevine weeps

    However, pruning is carried out during the vineyard’s dormancy, a period of vegetative rest and rest that lasts throughout the winter.

    It is not until the month of March, when the average temperatures start to reach 10ºC that the vines begin to “wake up”.

    It is then that we can witness one of nature’s most beautiful moments. The awakening of the vine in the form of tears that fall from the cuts made during pruning.

    The so-called tears of the vine, or tears of the vine is the first proof of life after the winter rest. When the roots of the vine begin to awaken and absorb water from the subsoil and the sap begins to circulate, and comes out through the pruning wounds.

    The accumulation of this substance creates these wonderful jewels in the form of tears, which fall in the form of weeping.

     

    How much does the grapevine weep?

    The amount of liquid that can be released from a vine varies depending on the vineyard’s reserves and the weather conditions. In very rainy years, up to 5 liters of sap have been recorded, although this is out of all normality, just as there are some records in which there has been no or negligible watering in an extremely dry year.

     

    When do tears end?

    Nature is wise, and like everything in nature, this phenomenon also has a reason.

    The cuts made during pruning are covered by a gummy substance and by the salts dissolved when the water evaporates, leading to the healing of the woody vessels.

    Once the healing process is complete, this tear-shaped dripping also ends and gives way to the first shoots.

    If the weeping of the vine begins simultaneously in all varieties, the first shoots may vary depending on the variety of the vine.

    We can find varieties that begin to sprout around March 23, such as Garnacha tintorera, Albariño or Moscatel de grano menudo among others, which are the early sprouting varieties.

    Among the late budding varieties, those that begin to show their buds from April 13, we find varieties such as Tempranillo, Macabeo or Airen.

    At Horola winery, we use traditional and manual methods for the care of our vines. Generation after generation we have learned to love the vines, to pamper them and to allow them to give us excellent fruit, with which we obtain wines of the highest quality. The result of respect and harmony between man and nature.

    From the tears of the vineyard to the broths

    At Bodegas Horola, we like to say that the vines weep with joy when they see the wines, the fruit of the harvests of previous years.

    Our complicity with the land, the vineyard and the winemaking process is maximum and we manage to transmit it in our product. A rioja of the highest quality.

    This is a small sample of what you can find in our wine store.

  • VINDUERO VINDOURO AWARDS 23 NOVEMBER 2019

    HOROLA WINERY.
    Proud of our small family winery.
    Vinduero Vindouro Awards
    GOLD Medal in Female .
    *Horola Garnacha.
    Silver Medal.
    *Horola MIL * Limited edition of
    “1000 bottles.
    And our surprise of the evening at this Vinduero Vindouro Gala
    GOLD Medal to the best Signature wine of Spain and Portugal…
    HOROLA GARNACHA with 90 points.
    Effort, passion and a lot of love is what they put.
    Syam Hornos and Adrián Hornos Olave, its AUTHORS.

  • 03.03.2019 PRUNING COMPLETED

    The finished pruning in BODEGAS HOROLA.
    All the work that is done throughout the year in the vineyard is important, because the quality of the grapes and the wine that is obtained later depends on how well it is done.
    Pruning is a meticulous work and for experts, it is not a matter of cutting branches of vine shoots, it is much more complex and that is done by experience.
    That is why in Bodegas Horola pruning and work in our vineyards leaving vegetation cover is very important.

    The love for our land says it all when tasting our great wines.

  • Sampling Tempranillo and Garnacha Harvest 2018

     

    -Grape Sampling-

    Three grapes are picked from the tip of the bunch, jumping every 5 meters to another row of vines to pick three grapes from the shoulders and always moving diagonally to pick three grapes from the middle part of the vineyard.

    In this way we get to know the amount of sugar in the vineyard and its graduation. Depending on the data obtained we will know if the vineyard is ready to be harvested.

    To elaborate Horola Mil we only use the part of the shoulders of the cluster where the grapes are of the highest quality.

  • LA VENDIMIA

    -THE HARVEST

    From the union of the Latin words “vinea” which means vineyard and “demere” from the verb to uproot or remove is born “vindemia” (grape harvest).

    -Labor in the vineyard, she pays for it in the grape harvest-

    And it is true, to get to the harvest, a whole year is spent taking care and pampering the vineyards to the maximum, to be able to have that great reward that is our grape.

    There are several different types of harvest, let’s get to know them a little better.

    -MANUAL HARVEST:

    As its name suggests, manual harvesting consists of selecting only the best grapes by hand, sometimes using only the shoulder part of the grape for its higher quality. The grapes arrive at the winery in perfect condition.

    The aim is to produce an excellent wine, a high quality final product.

    -MECHANICAL HARVEST:

    Mechanical harvesting uses grape harvesters, which go around the vineyards, picking the grapes all together, the best and worst quality ones, throwing them into containers, which means that the grapes do not arrive at the winery in the same conditions as when they are harvested by hand.

    It is mainly used in large vineyards. For mechanical harvesting, the vines must be trained on trellises.

    As a result, the final product is a lower quality wine.

    -VENDIMIA TARDÍA O “LATE HARVEST”:

    These are grapes that are left on the vine longer than usual, seeking to increase the amount of sugar in the grape. Generally used for fortified wines.

    -GRAPE HARVEST SCALAR:

    Harvesting is staggered, depending on the degree of ripeness of the grapes in different periods of time.

Este sitio web utiliza cookies para que usted tenga la mejor experiencia de usuario. Si continúa navegando está dando su consentimiento para la aceptación de las mencionadas cookies y la aceptación de nuestra política de cookies, pinche el enlace para mayor información. ACEPTAR

Aviso de cookies