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Heat prompts early grape harvest in Italy ( 2003-08-27 10:56) (Agencies)
Vintners across Italy are rushing into one of the earliest harvests in recent memory to save their grapes from drying up in this summer's exceptional heat wave.
The heat has banished mold and parasites from the vines and thickened the grapes' skin, which gives wine its aromas and raises its sugar and alcoholic content, said Luigi Mainetti an official at Coldiretti, an Italian farmers' association.
If the weather turns out just right, wines such as Chianti, Barolo and Brunello di Montalcino, often the jewels of Italian and foreign cellars, will produce an especially good vintage, Mainetti said.
"Such an early harvest promises a vintage of excellent quality," Mainetti said.
Coldiretti expects wine production to be around 1.3 billion gallons for the 2003 harvest, higher than the historic low of 1.08 billion gallons in 2002.
"It's hard to talk about prices now, but they should remain stable," Mainetti said.
Alfonso Iannielli, a winemaker in the hills of Avio, in the northeast, said he has already started gathering his Chardonnay and Pinot grapes.
"Normally in this period we close down and go on holiday, but we've had to give that up," he said in a telephone interview. "Still there are some good sides to it. For instance, right now the children are not in school and they can take part in the harvest. This way it can be done all in the family, like it used to be."
As the time for harvest shifts from the cool autumn months to the heat of summer some traditions have had to adapt.
In Sicily, where stifling temperatures and early harvest are less of a surprise, some vintners switched to night-harvesting a few years ago, and the new tradition is lending itself well to this particularly sizzling summer.
Pino Giaccone, who has been tending vines in the Sicilian town of Donnafugata for 30 years, is among those who have chosen to work at night, to take advantage of the cooler air and to better preserve the quality of the grapes.
"It's the same grapes we could have collected in daytime but at the same time they are different ¡ª the aroma, the taste ¡ª it changes everything," he said.
The early harvests are even feeding a new kind of tourism.
"We converge on the fields by candlelight, 3,000, 4,000 people, it's like going to a rock concert," Giaccone said.
Tractors' lights are used to illuminate the vineyards, but the actual harvesting is by hand.
But the wine season has just begun and the grapes for some of the more heavy-bodied reds will be staying on their vines until October.
"For the other grapes, we are in the hands of God," said Mainetti. "We need just a little rain, not a lot, no calamities, just a little rain."
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