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Growing Glorious Grapes, Part II: Pruning and Training

Now that the vineyard is planted, you need to know how to care for it properly. Read on to learn how to train and prune vines for optimum production and care.

Pruning

Prune vines in winter when dormant, between December and March. Pruning sets bud numbers and crop for harvest. It is important to learn proper pruning. A vine that is too large is prone to disease and has lower-quality fruit, and a small vine will not be productive.

Training Methods

When deciding how to train grapevines consider these three things:

Grapes do best on a gentle slope with an east-to-south exposure. After planting cut away the last season’s wood, leaving one cane for the trunk. Before training decide if you will have one wire or two wires for the vines.  Once this decision is made, training is the same for the next three growing seasons, except that half way up you will train some of the canes/cordons, and the other half will be above them. Typically the first wire is at thirty-six inches above ground level, and the second wire is thirty-six inches above that.

If cane growth is less than thirty-six inches long and/or less than ¼ inch in diameter, cut back all growth to two buds near the base of the best cane and train as stated above.

The Kniffin (Double Wire) system – This system trains one new, strong shoot vertically to the upper wire, then laterals are selected to train each way on both wires after the shoot has been tipped six inches below the top wire. Use hemp string for training, tying it to either a stake at the base of the vine or to the vine with a non-slip loop to avoid girdling. The tendrils around the trunk, arms, or canes that are to become permanent parts of the vine should be removed, thus preventing girdling.

Single-Curtain or Hudson River system – This cascading system is traditional for native or French-American hybrids. The wire used should be galvanized crinkle wire or bright basic number eight wire that has low stretchability, because once the system is established, there is no way to tighten the wire.

Cordons shouldn’t overlap. There should be at least one foot between them.

Caution: grapes have a tendency to overfruit. To avoid this, do not keep more than twenty to thirty flower buds on the most vigorous vines. If vines over produce at this age, it can reduce production over the next two to three years.

If you are interested in growing grapes in containers check out these sites:

https://www.container-gardening-tips.com/container-fruit-gardening/growing-grapes-in-containers.html [1]

https://www.weekendgardener.net/growing-grapes/grow-grapevines-in-pots.htm [2]

For more information on training grapes and there common pests check out these sites:

https://cru.cahe.wsu.edu/CEPublications/eb0637/eb0637.pdf [3]

https://pubs.cas.psu.edu/FreePubs/pdfs/UL212.pdf [4]

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