Grape - Canadice

Handy Gardening Secrets small fruits  


Grape - Canadice

Ripening in early September, it is considered to be a good grape for jams, jellies and fresh eating. The Candice Grape, Vitis 'Canadice', is a very good red seedless variety with compact fruit clusters of large berries. With its large, shallowly-three-lobed, green foliage, it has flowers that are attractive to bees and ripe fruit is attractive to some hornets and wasps. Candice is very vigorous with good winter hardiness. It is a woody, deciduous, tendril climbing vine which typically grows 15-20 feet long, unless pruned shorter. Grapes are primarily grown for fruit production in home fruit gardens where they provide good ornamental value: bold summer foliage, showy fruit, some fall color and shaggy, twisted trunking and branching often best seen in winter. A single grapevine produces enough new growth every year to roof an arbor, arch a walkway, or shade over a terrace or deck. This grape tolerates a wide range of soil conditions, but must have good drainage. The grape vines can be quite attractive year-round and can provide good cover, screening, or shade to areas around the home. Birds love grapes, so be sure to plant some to share. Grapes need full sunlight and high temperatures to ripen, so plant on southern slopes, the south side of windbreaks, or the south sides of buildings. Grapes need a good support system like fences, walls, trellises, arbors or other structures. ... more

 

Grape - Canadice