OZARKS FOUND WELL-ADAPTED TO GRAPE GROWING
State Experiment Station Director Convinced Crop Is Answer to
Farmer's Prayer
St. Louis Post-Dispatch - Monday, July 23, 1951

Photo captions: PAUL H. SHEPARD (picture at
left) inspecting the Sheridan grape. Shepard is director of the
Missouri State Fruit experiment station at Mountain Grove. In center
picture, ANN GRAY JONES of Mountain Grove, looks over some heavy bunches of
grapes. Picture at right shows WILLIAM MARTIN (center), University of
Missouri horticultural extension agent, and Shepard (right) discussing
pruning. T. J. Talbert, former chairman of the university department
of horticulture, says grape growing should be one of the most profitable and
dependable crops in the Ozark plateau region. He says the elevation
makes for good air drainage, a long growing season enable the fruit to
mature properly, and rainfall generally comes early in the season, then
tapering off.
By F. A. ---ymer, A Staff Correspondent of the Post-Dispatch
Mountain Grove, Mo. - There's a good day coming when vineyards will garland
the Ozark hills and wine flowing from the presses will bring wealth to the
growers. This is the conviction of Paul H. Shepard, director of the
State Fruit Experiment Station here.
It is based on the experiments carried on under his direction
during the 17 years that he has been here and those made before he came,
over a total period of 40 years. Land is cheap and adaptable, labor
costs are low, markets are accessible, and on the score of dependability
there has been but one crop failure at the station in 22 years. So
grapes are the answer to the Ozark farmer's prayer.
The good thing about grapes is that they thrive on soil
poorly suited to other uses, are free from seasonal hazards and are
benefitted by weather conditions that are harmful to other crops.
400 Varieties of Grapes.
At the station, which has been in operation 51 years,
experiments have been conducted in 400 varieties of grapes. For
practical reasons the varieties that are acceptable to the trade have had
the most attention. These are Concords, Catawbas, Delawares and
Missouri Reislings. Shepard thinks he has better varieties, but the
trade will accept only the varieties that they know about. For that
reason introduction of new varieties is slow and costly.
All over the Ozark plateau, from Arkansas to St. Louis, the
gravel soil is adaptable to grape culture without benefit of fertilizer.
In 10 years of fertilizing experiments, untreated soil has produced equally
with the best treated soil. Planting on the ridges where other crops
fail is advantageous to grapes as a defense against frost. Other
favoring production factors are long seasons, immunity to drouth and the
hardiness and long life of the vines.
The United States Department of Agriculture says there are
five areas in the county suitable for grape culture and the Ozarks area is
one of them. The others are in New York, Ohio, Michigan, and
California. The great advantage that South Missouri has over the other
areas is the cheapness of its land, for in the other grape states the land
prices are very high. Another advantage is that there are more hours
of heat units than in other states. Analysis shoes that the quality of
the fruit in sugar and acid content is equal to that of the best product of
other states.
Cheap Land.
Nowhere, reminds Shepard, can land ready for planting be
bought cheaper than in the Ozarks, $50 an acre and down. Labor costs,
50 cents an hour an dup, are lower than in most any other area. The
cost of wire is about the same everywhere but the Ozark farmer can get his
posts from his woodlot at no expense, except his time and labor.
Interest is growing, says Shepard, and planting is on the
increase. Two hundred acres have been planted in this vicinity in the
past year. The greatest deterrent is the fact that it takes three
years for vines to come into production, but over against that is the
ruggedness and long life of the plants, twice as long as the life of the
apple tree, sometimes reaching the age of 75 years.
Plants cost eight cents apiece and are placed 540 to the
acre, at a cost of less than $50 per acre. The total cost of starting
a vineyard depends upon whether the farmer does the work himself and upon
the kind of posts that he uses. The producing cost after a vineyard is
established is about $50 an acre, including spraying, pruning and
cultivating. The production average is two and a half tons per acre
and may with extra care be brought up to six to seven tons an acre.
The markets for fresh fruit and fresh juice are near. The fruit is
bought by the vine companies at $125 a ton. California grapes,
produced at greater cost, bring $65 a ton.
Vineyard Men Organize.
Vineyard men of four counties have formed the Ozark Grape
Growers' Association, with headquarters here, for the main purpose, by
co-operation, of reducing the costs of production and promoting quantity
sales. Other organizations are being formed elsewhere. The
station is advising farmers to make comparatively small plantings and fit
the vineyards to the general plan of farming rather than to make grapes
their major crop. One man who had planted corn for 10 years, with a
production of 25 bushes to the acres, put part of his land into grapes and
in the last three years has taken each year three tons of grapes from each
acre.
Grapes thrive, says Shepard, where other crops fail because
it is a dry weather plant, actually doing better if there is mid-summer
drouth. The plants rarely freeze. One year in 22 is the average
at the station. The buds which produce the fruiting canes develop late
in the spring and generally miss the spring frosts. Only in rare
instances does a vine die because of disease or insect injury, probably less
than one in 500.
One contemplating the planting of a vineyard, says Shepard,
should take into account four important facts regarding a location - whether
the soil and climate will grow first grade grapes, whether there is a
stable, continuous market for them, whether the grapes can be grown at a
reasonable cost as compared to land labor and material costs compared to
costs in other grape growing areas, and what yields and what prices can be
obtained from Ozark grapes compared to other sections.
40-Acre Plot.
Shepard advises that securing as much as 500 acres on one
piece, suitable for the growing of grapes, is out of the question. The
upland rolling plateau grape land, he says, occurs at intervals throughout
the Ozarks and it is advisable to select locations best sited for grapes in
perhaps 12 different blocks. As 40 acres of grapes is about all
one man can handle by himself up to harvest time, such a unit can be
purchased by itself. The proper-sized operating equipment, such as
spray machinery, tractor implements, etc., can be fully occupied on a
40-acre vineyard. By separating the vineyards, there is less
likelihood of hail, tornado, insect of disease injury striking all at once.
In the procedure of marketing Catawba grapes they are tested
in the vineyard for sugar and acid content. The grapes are cut,
weighed and poured into the hopper of the press. The fresh juice is
pumped from the press into a tank truck and hauled away to St. Louis.
Payment is on the basis of weight of grapes delivered to the press.
A vineyard, says Shepard, is a heritage which a man can pass on to his
children, not only because of the income but the investment is in land which
will yield abundant annual crops for a long time.
Shepard has a letter from T. J. Talbert, former chairman of
the Department of Horticulture, College of Agriculture, University of
Missouri, expressing the conviction, based upon experiments, that with
proper attention to sites and soils, grape growing in the Ozark plateau
region should be one of the most profitable an dependable crops.
Discussing factors suitable to grape culture he says:
"Some of these are elevation which affords good air drainage, a long growing
season which may enable the fruit to mature fully and properly, and where
the rainfall generally comes early in the season and tapers off in the month
of July. This is satisfactory to the grape because as harvest
develops, dry weather with plenty of sunshine is needed for the best
development of the fruit.
"Good soil aeration and drainage is usually afforded and the
elements required by the grape in producing satisfactory yields and quality
fruit are generally found in abundance."
With such encouragement Director Shepard looks with increased
confidence to the time when vineyards will garland the Ozark hills.
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