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Vines are trained into a variety of styles that aid the growers in managing the canopy and controlling yields. The use of vine training systems in viticulture is aimed primarily to assist in canopy management with finding the balance in enough foliage to facilitate photosynthesis without excessive shading that could impede grape ripening or promote grape diseases.
Most of the vines are trained under the Guyot system, though there has been some experimentation with the Cordon de Royat system to help temper the vigor of some over productive rootstock. The close plantings and tradition usually mandates manual harvesting of the grapes , especially for the premier and grand cru vineyards.
A guyot or tablemount is an isolated underwater volcanic mountain. Guyot may also refer to: Guyot (surname), including a list of people with the name; Guyot (vine system), a system for training grape vines; Hilton v. Guyot, an 1895 United States Supreme Court case; Guyot (crater), a lunar impact crater on the far side of the Moon
A controlled system of irrigation where water is provided to the grape vine drip by drip in precise amounts by a system of pipes and metered valves. Modern vineyards equipped with sensor technology may have their irrigation pattern computerized with the amount of water being adjusted depending on the data received from the soil sensors.
Another area in the northcenter of Veneto, close to Asiago, is Breganze, where the dessert wine Torcolato is produced with the Vespaiola grape. The traditional vine training system of the eastern part is the Sylvoz system, today replaced by the Guyot system, while in the western part there is more traditionally the Pergola system. Veneto's ...
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Dr. Jules Guyot (17 May 1807 – 31 March 1872) [1] was a French physician and agronomist who was born in the commune of Gyé-sur-Seine, in the department of Aube. Guyot studied medicine in Paris, and had an avid interest in mechanics, physics and telegraphy, but he is best known for his work in viticulture.
The Hyatt family foster failed with Hank, a giant 8-year-old Mastiff-Labrador mix, after sporty northern Virginia families expressed interest but backed off after learning how lazy he is.