WineShare - Your own row of 50 vines for one year.

WineShare - Your own row of 50 vines for one year.

Product Code: P00321
Location: UK:UK Mail Order

The Experience
Your own row of 50 vines for one year. Delivered with a full colour newsletter, the WineShare brochure and a Gift Certificate

Your Membership entitlement includes:
-  Stewardship of not less than 50 vines.
-  At least 10 cases of superior or deluxe wines per annum at advantageous prices.
-  Visits to your vineyard to inspect your vines at any time.
-  Exclusive invitations for you and your guests to attend dinners and wine tasting events in the UK and at the vineyards*.
- Participation in the vintage and the opportunity to pick your own grapes.
-  Vineyard tours and lunches*.
-  Regular newsletters and vineyard updates.
- Selected email-only offers.
-  Discounted travel packages.

Vital information
* Your wine yard will either be located in Italy or in France. Dinners and lunches are at extra cost in the vineyard tours.

Availability
This experience is available all along the years.

Other information
You will be delivered this gift pack to the address you have specified.



WineShare - Your own row of 50 vines for one year.
  Description Price Each Quantity Total
  WineShare - Your own row of 50 vines for one year. : UK Mail Order
EXPERIENCE TOTAL 55000pts
 

Fascinating Facts

The term vine was originally a term for the plant on which grapes grew, from the word for wine (Greek oinos), for which grapes were grown. In American usage "vine" is now a generic term for all climbing plants. In British English "The vine" is specifically the Grape vine ; other vines are termed "climbers".



Climbing plants

Certain plants always grow as vines, while a few grow as vines only part of the time. For instance, poison ivy and bittersweet can grow as low shrubs when support is not available, but will become vines when support is available.

A vine is a growth form based on long, flexible stems. This has two purposes. A vine may use rock exposures, other plants, or other supports for growth rather than investing energy in a lot of supportive tissue, enabling the plant to reach sunlight with a minimum investment of energy. This has been a highly-successful growth form for plants such as kudzu and Japanese honeysuckle, both of which are invasive exotics in parts of North America. Conversely, there are some tropical vines that develop skototropism and grow away from the light, a type of negative phototropism.

The vine growth form may also enable plants to colonize large areas quickly, even without climbing high. This is the case with periwinkle and ground ivy.

Most vines are flowering plants. These may be divided into woody vines or lianas, such as wisteria, kiwifruit, and common ivy, and herbaceous (nonwoody) vines, such as morning glory.

One odd group of vining plants is the fern genus Lygodium, called climbing ferns. Here, the plant's stem does not climb, but rather the fronds (leaves) do. The fronds unroll from the tip, and theoretically never stop growing. In the meantime, they can form thickets as they unroll over other plants, rockfaces, and fences.