The cultivation of the vine requires constant care or the fruit will very soon degenerate. After the rains the loosely made walls require to have breaches repaired; the ground must be plowed or harrowed and cleared of weeds-contrast with this the vineyard of the sluggard (
Pr 24:30-31); in the early spring the plants must be pruned by cutting off dead and fruitless branches (
Le 25:3,
4;
Isa 5:6) which are gathered and burned (
Joh 15:6). As the grapes ripen they must be watched to keep off jackals and foxes (
So 2:15), and in some districts even wild boars (
Ps 80:13). The watchman is stationed in one of the towers and overlooks a
considerable area. When the grape season comes, the whole family of the owner frequently take their residence in a booth constructed upon one of the larger towers and remain there until the grapes are practically finished. It is a time of special happiness (compare
Isa 16:10). The gleanings are left to the poor of the village or town (
Le 19:10;
De 24:21; Jud 8:2;
Isa 17:6;
24:13;
Jer 49:9;
Mic 7:1). In the late summer the vineyards are a beautiful mass of green, as contrasted with the dried-up parched land around, but in the autumn the leaves are sere and yellow (
Isa
34:4), and the place desolate.