The program featured demonstrations of sensors, mapping technology, and variable-rate GIS-ready equipment for vineyard management.
The program featured demonstrations of sensors, mapping technology, and variable-rate GIS-ready equipment for vineyard management.
Links below feature posters produced for the event.
Morning: The morning program at Clearview Vineyards on Keuka Lake featured presentations by the Efficient Vineyard project, directed by Terry Bates, Cornell University, and funded by the USDA Specialty Crops Research Initiative:
- Efficient Vineyard Overview
- Sensors for Mapping Vineyard Soils
- Using Spatial Data to Estimate Yield Potential
- Extracting Useful Information from Spatial Data
- Open-source Spatial Data Processing and Decision Support
- Developing Web-Based Precision Viticulture Tools for Managers
- Anatomy of Variable-Rate Vineyard Mechanization
- Mapping Yield and Juice Soluble Solids at Harvest
- Efficient Vineyard Project Outreach Efforts
Afternoon: The afternoon program, at Anthony Road Vineyards on Seneca Lake, featured a variety of sensors and equipment under development
- Distributed, In Canopy Environmental Sensing with Monarch Weather Monitors , Hunter Adams, Electrical Engineering, Cornell University
- 3-D Image Analysis for Cluster and Berry Counts , George Kantor, Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University
- Low-Cost Vision-Based Yield Prediction, Jonathan Jaramillo, PhD candidate, Electrical Engineering, Justine Vanden Heuvel, Horticulture, and Kristin Petersen, Cornell University
- Microtensiometer for Monitoring Vine Water Status, Alan Lakso, Horticulture, and Abe Stroock, Cornell Engineering
- Measuring Canopy Vigor, Elevation, and Canopy Volume via Aerial Drone , Jim Meyers, Eastern NY Commercial Horticulture Program, Cornell Cooperative Extension
- Electrical Conductivity Mapping versus USGS Soil Map , Johnathon Skinner, Helena AgriEnterprises, Williamson, NY