English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

10 answers

You eat the seeds and watch them grow. otherwise go back to the grapevine and get a piece of vine that is growing in the dirt and make sure it has roots on it. If you cant find a vine with roots you take a piece of vine and lay a brick/rock on it and go back in the spring and it will have roots to transplant.

2006-09-14 15:02:55 · answer #1 · answered by gormom 3 · 0 1

It is best if you don’t use seeds to propagate grapes. IF they sprout after you plant them you will finish with a vine that will take many years to grow and it will never produce grapes true to type.This means they will not be the same as those you have tried but a combination of the original vine and the nearby pollinating vine. Also you must remember that not all types of grapes have seeds. The best way to propagate a grape vine is this. Find someone that already growing this particular type of grape or any other grape you may like and ask them if you could have, in early spring when vines are still dormant (this the time when vines are getting pruned off) 10 to 12 of the vine cuttings, 40cm/24inc long, with 3 to 4 buts on them. Plant them in 3 or 4 large pots in good garden soil with half of the cutting buried in soil. The next year they will be ready to transplant in the garden. Prepare the site, and add plenty of compost and organic matter. Do not use all vines unless you have a very big yard.
Happy Gardening

2006-09-14 23:49:54 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Seeds require stratification (moist chilling), of about 12 weeks at 33-40 F, and not sooner, before planting. Don't count on seeds to germinate, if picked up from the ground, because those seeds more than likely have dried out. Typically, new grape vines are sold as bareroot plants, and, if you want new plants, this would be the best way for you to get a cultivar of known quality. I however understand why you want to use your seeds, so do as I have suggested for chilling, and then plant, per your zone requirement. Good Luck.
------------------------------------------------------
You can download the propagation bulletin faster than I can type it to you. Go to http://www.ext.nodak.edu/extpubs/plantsci/landscap/h1257.pdf.
Go to Page 7 of the publication and take a look at sketch #16, which shows simple layering. This is the easiest and fastest way to propagate grapevines.

2006-09-14 18:49:54 · answer #3 · answered by Excel 5 · 0 0

dry the seed out. put it in a sealed, small bag. next spring, get it out and plant it in a pot. keep moist! do not let it dry out for to long and don,t over water. just feel the soil every day to make sure the soil is moist. after the seedling starts comming up through the soil put near window and keep it moist. when it's ready to plant, find the sunniest part of your yard and plant. fertilize it when the plants leaves are getting fuller. when it starts vining, put up a grape traillus or build a grape arbor, which is a square frame built over and around the grapes so it can travel up it and keep your grapes off the ground.

2006-09-14 15:02:35 · answer #4 · answered by bonzobadildo 1 · 0 1

Bristlenose Plecos are very pleasant to all fish. they could get slightly teretorial in the direction of one yet another yet not something severe. I easily have a male that guards the zucchini so as that the little male won't be able to get it. No biting only a short chase. Bristlenose Plecos keeps your tank sparkly, mine has never been so sparkling. I easily have them with white cloud mountain minnows and they have in basic terms had fry. The Plecos left the eggs, they could suck the stones or perhaps as they were given to the position the eggs were they could swim over them. additionally they leave the fry on my own too. I watch them plenty, they are large little fish. the in basic terms improve as vast as 12cm optimal 13 cm, they stay for as a lot as ten years now and again. they prefer little caves and deffinetly get them some bogwood, it really is sturdy for his or her digestive gadget. in spite of the actual undeniable reality that they devour algae I recommend you get some algae wafers as well. the affection zucchini as well. replace it after 2 days sometimes one searching on the way it dissolves contained in the water. For breeding make positive you've a really darkish cave it fairly is closed on the only side with in basic terms one the front. a lot of human beings use a huge percentpipe. the female will lay the eggs and the male will do the guarding. sturdy success at the same time with your pleco's they are large to have. i appreciate staring at them. Mine is so tame that if i regulate the Zucchini the only tries to get onto my hand :)

2016-11-26 23:47:56 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

you don't use the seeds.. cut off a piece of the vine and plant it in good top soil .. in a pot would be best to start off.. BUT this should be done in the spring.. but if you have to do it now.. put the pot in a protected place for the winter.. like on a front porch.. good luck.. i am doing the same thing this spring..

2006-09-14 15:02:49 · answer #6 · answered by c 3 · 0 0

you have to live in the right conditions for growing grapes - right amount of water, heat, soil, lighting, etc.

plant a grape and see what happens.

2006-09-14 14:50:35 · answer #7 · answered by mighty_power7 7 · 0 0

Go to lowes and you will buy a starter. Cheeper and alrady there. thay have all kinds or go to local faarmer. Thing is.....its takes about 5yrs. to get them started. I love them also, but in Aransas we only grow th grape kind.

2006-09-14 14:55:59 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You don't, grapes grow from root stock, so you would need to plant roots to grow anything.

2006-09-14 14:55:30 · answer #9 · answered by Niche Jerk 4 · 0 0

save the whole grape

2006-09-14 14:49:33 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers