Dark blue grapes in full clusters make great fresh eating, as well as juice, jelly, wine, and even grape pie. Berries ripen 2–3 weeks later than the popular (and hardier) Bluebell. Vines are hardy to around –17°. Z5. (well-rooted vines)
NEW!
Dark blue grapes in full clusters make great fresh eating, as well as juice, jelly, wine, and even grape pie. Berries ripen 2–3 weeks later than the popular (and hardier) Bluebell. Vines are hardy to around –17°. Z5. (well-rooted vines)
NEW!
Items from our perennial plants warehouse ordered on or before March 7 will ship around March 31 through late April, starting with warmer areas and finishing in colder areas. Orders placed after March 7 will ship around late April through early-to-mid May, in the order in which they were received.
Grapes are easy to grow and can bear plentifully even in northern New England. They begin fruiting in the second or third year after planting. They are rugged and cold hardy. Our vines bear consistently every year. Although many people prefer seedless types for table use, seeded varieties can be quite enjoyable right off the vine if you don’t mind “grape nuts.” Grape seeds contain an antioxidant that is twice as powerful as vitamin C.
Most grape varieties are bred from a combination of different species, V. labrusca and V. vinifera being the most important. Labrusca is native to the eastern U.S., has a wild tart musky (foxy) flavor, and is hardy and disease resistant. Concord is the best-known of the labruscas. Vinifera, native to Europe, is extremely high quality, and is the most important wine grape in the world, but is not cold hardy and is prone to disease. V. riparia, native to North America, used as rootstock for grafted varieties and in hybridization with vinifera, is very adaptable to a wide range of soils, disease resistant and very cold hardy.
In central Maine, “very early” grapes begin ripening in mid-August, while “midseason” ripen mid-September. Late-season Concord, a standard elsewhere, does not ripen in many northern areas.
If you plan to do this, plant your new grapevine at a 45˚ angle. Train new shoots horizontally for at least one foot. Then, curve shoots upward to form a J shape. This creates a flexible hinge, allowing you to lay the vine down at the end of the season.
Train one or more vines onto an arbor or gazebo; we have 8 vines, spaced about 10' apart. Prune each vine back to a single trunk. Encourage several permanent arms from each trunk. In late spring remove 70– 90% of the past summer’s growth. Next summer new fruiting canes will grow off the permanent arms.