Oh September. It feels like I'm only just getting my head around secondary cuts in the slow cooker, constantly wiping the dog's feet before she comes inside, digging out the spencer and woolly tights every day, and then you're on my doorstep with your promises of all things bright and shiny.
It's all a big tease though; I know there are probably some roaring spring frosts on the way.
Vineyards across the country will soon burst into life. Every bud on every vine will contain an embryonic shoot already with everything it needs to develop into fruit and leaves.
Spring re-establishes the connections between the vine's buds and its roots. As soils warm up, the roots kick into gear, they absorb more water and nutrients, sap begins to flow trough the vine's trunk and this causes the buds to swell and burst. There's a lovely time-lapse video of the process online at vimeo.com/45257535.
Frost damage occurs when temperatures drop below 0C after green growing tissue or "colour" has appeared from a bud. Twelve years ago, Hawke's Bay experienced three devastating frosts (September 15 and 26, and October 5) in which temperatures dropped as low as -3C.