Layering Grape Vines
In article . com,
James wrote:
On Sep 16, 9:11 pm, "Pavel314" wrote:
I let a section of my vineyard go for a couple of years and tried to
rehabilitate it this weekend. I found that a couple of vines had died but,
fortunately, neighboring vines had used my absence to grow several long
branches which reached to where the dead vines had been located.
I dug trenches about a foot long, with one end starting where the dead vine
had been. I then put the long branch from the neighbor vine into the trench,
with the end of the branch sticking up from the soil where the dead vine had
been.
I used a root propagating chemical to dress the portion of the vine which
was underground, then buried it. Hopefully, these treated vines will put out
roots underground. Next summer, I plan to cut the end of the long branch
going to the neighbor plant and have a new grapevine.
Any problems I should watch out for in this operation?
Paul
I've done cuttings after the leaves drop and just stick them in the
ground without hormone and had more than 50% success. Don't see why
you would have any problems unless something in the soil killed your
vines.
You might as well do some pruning and root them anyway.
If this is a domestic grape, there should be no problem. If it is a
European grape, you will eventually have phylloxera problems.
--
FB - FFF
Billy
Get up, stand up, stand up for yor rights.
Get up, stand up, Don't give up the fight.
- Bob Marley
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