Cool video ma'am , tyvm. I just moved into a new place down by the river (we just had a terrible flood here/Erwin Tn) and discovered that one small, lone muscadine grape plant survived the chaos, so I wanted to tend to her and see what happens. This video is literally PERFECT. You're impressively knowledgeable on the subject and a good, clear-speaking narrator. Have a good one.
I have just realized recently that I have wild Muscadine Grapes and also Beauty Berries growing on my vacant land that is literally raw land in the middle of nowhere. Lucky me!
me too, I have made jelly with the grapes, I just planted more muscadines to make a good harvest. the beauty berry I leave for the animals, as I don't like the juice/jelly
I had my first muscadine grape yesterday, it was so good I had to find the original name so I can get some plants… I will be growing some in the spring of 25. Thank you for sharing ❤
Was out planting 60 or so thornless blackberry bushes and a small muscadine vine growing on a pine tree caught my eye. Great info as I may try to make a few 50 foot rows of them.
And gonna be selling a ton of these muscadine grape 🍇 vines soon. I have a ton of them all over my property and all are producing very large amounts and very quality 🍇
Hello Jerra Loved the video but a quick comment ... the Muscadines are Vitis rotundifolia, separate from the fox grapes Vitis labrusca and the European grape Vitis vinifera Keep on presenting ...
I'm really wanting to plant some muscadines from seed and I've been collecting seeds from ones i've eaten. I have 2 challenges though. 1. my yard is literally smaller than my dining room table and my HOA is really strict about plant heights. 2. I have no idea what variety my seeds are. Hopefully I can get creative and figure out a way to make it work in my "backyard"
What cultivar do you have? Yours are much bigger than mine. Mine are also bitter and not good for fresh eating. Thank you for all of your great videos.
Loved your video! I’m I’m Central Florida and bought a few Southern Home grapes about 2 months ago. It is now October and they are going dormant, and I had not yet planted them in the ground. Any tips on keeping them alive through the winter? Wasn’t sure if I should leave them in the little 4 inch pots or up pot them. We plan to make a vertical trellis to grow them on.
My muscadine vine is still to young to produce yet, still vining over its arch. Can't wait to try the grapes from it! Your harvest was amazing! How old is your vine?
I’m growing Alachua muscadine grape. This is year two and it’s thriving on a cattle panel trellis. It’s loaded with grapes and I heard they will be ripe in August or September. I need to learn to make 🍷 wine.
This video is so helpful. You really did your research. I’ve been keeping notes on my research. But this video covers it all including making my decision on which varieties to grow. I live in north Alabama and wanted big muscadines for fresh eating and jelly with extended season harvesting. So the types you mentioned for July-Sept harvest is what I’ll get. Is there any reason you didn’t mention Ison’s brand of muscadine? I’d just read so much about them I thought they were one of the best since they’re self fertile. Also I made jam with mine. I cut in half took out seeds, boiled, then blended them for a few seconds. It was great. Is wasted so much in the first batch thinking you couldn’t use the skins so decided on jam.
I didn't mention Ison's because its not one of the common cultivars grown in Florida so I don't have much experience with them, but they are a great resource for all things muscadine. They also have a lot of good RUclips videos on growing muscadines too.
I am building my arbor this week, I am just using steel cables along the top so hopefully that will make it easier to harvest instead of using the wooden trellis you are using.
I am AMAZED with your grapes!! I am growing a grape plan my neighnor gave me and inhave no odea what typenit is. I just built a trellis fornit. It jas 4 main stems. It is its 2nd year in groundm last year it grew from.a stub that was almost destroy3d. One small.shoot came out and i protected it qmd it grew into a long vine but no flowers. I cut it backnall the way to 12 inches above ground and notnit looks sonmuch thicker and healthier with leaves budding... i live in Central California...i hope intrimmednit down ok. Unhqbe no idea what I was doing. I furtilezednit a month or 2 ago before the spring. I am crossing my fingers. Based on your video inshould cut the other brqnches fromnthe base and leave only n one main one..right? Should inwait till end of this year or donit now??
Jerra, this has been so helpful! I'm just getting started with muscadines and scuppernogs. Hoping to get a canning juice steamer extractor to make jellies and juice. Have you ever heard if their leaves can be used for Dolmas and other stuffed grape leaf recipes?
Thanks for the lesson! We have a ranch in Oklahoma and discovered wild Muscadine growing in different parts. Before this year, we hadn't even heard of it. So now we want to be purposeful in growing vines on trellises. There's a lot of deer. What can be done to minimize them eating the fruit? What other animal threats are there? We have armadillo, possum, hogs, and rabbits too.
A lot of animals like to eat them. Quite honestly I am no expert about keeping critters out because its not an issue I deal with in my garden. I have 6FT privacy fencing and am in an urban neighborhood. But if I did have an issue, I would probably build an enclosed garden with fencing. Kind of hard to do with long rows of muscadine grapes though.
Thanks Jerra, this is just what I was looking for. I am not far from you, Citrus County and have lots of these on my property. Am I allowed to take these to the market without a license? It seems all the info I come across is for huge companies.
I recently found a muscadine in my back yard in FLA . 9a zone. It is fruiting now. Can I take cuttings now? Or do I have to wait? I want to start a trellis in a different area of my yard.
I’m sure these are the grapes I am growing. They look exactly like yours. They taste great but afterwards my lips burn and they feel itchy and so do my hands. Is this normal and safe to keep eating? I do not use any pesticides in my garden.
I just discovered muscadine. Had never had them before and love them. Would love to grow them. Where can I find a vine? Is there. Particular place online where I can order it?
All of them will produce well in your zone. I would choose the cultivar based on what you want to make with it. Some are better for fresh eating (Southern Home, Delicious, Alachua). Others are better for making wine (Noble).
We have 3 plants and they seem to not do well. How long will it take to become established? Our first plant and first year we had great success but the second year it died. You mentioned proon8ng videos but I didn’t see anything listed. Thank you for your video and if you have any suggestions to help m I would appreciate it.
How long it takes to get established depends on the size of the plant your starting out with. Usually it takes at least 2 years to get established and start producing consistently. I'm sorry I didn't realize that I didn't add the links to the other videos. I fixed that now. I highly recommend you check out this RUclips channel for lots of tips on growing and pruning muscadines in the long row type of setup: www.youtube.com/@KinfolkFarmofGeorgia
Anything you can't use or anything that goes bad can be used for compost if you have your own compost bin. All rotten fruits and veggies are good for compost to make sure your soil has everything it needs for next season's grow
How often would I water my muscadine vine if I were to have it in the same barrel? I am getting a blanc du bois, and I want it in a pot with a Trellis in the pot, too, or behind it (not sure yet). Any tips?
Thank you. I just bought an Alachua from Lowes a couple of weeks ago. Now there are large brown rust looking spots on a lot of the leaves. Do you have any idea of what it could be? Some of the spots are as big as half the leaf.
I would guess its a leaf disease like rust or blight. Spray with 1 cup hydrogen peroxide per gallon of water. Make sure there is adequate ventilation so the leaves dry quickly.
I live in texas and they are native here and at this point they seem invasive😂 they are vines along every fenceline and everywhere in the woods they are growing up trees with vines over a inch thick but not all are fruiting idk why
Most wild muscadines are male so when you find a vine with fruit (female) take good care of it! I don’t know if there is a way to distinguish between the vines other than the presence or absence of fruit.
I ripped out all wild plants that were on my property. really didnt think I would be planting. But here we are. I have 2 grapes and will be getting muskies.. Will be using 15 to 20 gal grow bags. looks like these require more trellis than grapes.
Muscadine grapes are super easy to grow. They are native to the USA and tolerate a wide range of conditions. I would not reccomend to grow in zones 6 and below.
Muscadines are usually propagated by cuttings. Especially since the majority of the more modern and better tasting cultivars are hybrids. So plants grown from seeds would not be the same.
I notice honey bees like to "drink" the juice out of the grapes. So I harvest very early in the morning before they show up. I had a small hornets nest in one of the vines last year. I just sprayed it off with a hard blast from my water hose. Have not noticed any other issues so far.
A month ago, my partner cut down a vine. Later, I recognized it as a Muscadine; he didn’t know what it was. I’ve found several small Muscadine vines in several locations. I have no idea of the variety except they’re wild. I understand they are dioecious (male plants and female plants) and I probably won’t know what I have until they bloom. What I’m thinking of doing is moving three or four plants to within ten or twenty feet of each other and let them intertwine. The odds will be better that I’ll get at least one male and one female, maybe two females. I don’t want to buy a plant from the store when I have them on my property. Do you think it’s a waste of time? I haven’t seen the fruit since moving here eight years ago so something has been eating it so it might be worth growing what’s here.
I bought muscadine and scuppernongs because i thought they would do well and produce a lot without a lot of attention. We're in our 4 th year and haven't see a single grape, nor even a single flower. Does anyone here know of any common mistakes that people make that might cause this?
@@JerrasGarden Ahhh ok. I'm not sure how to describe the size. The base of the vine is about 1/2 inch thick. The total bulk of the branches and leaves is probably about 2ft thick x 2ft tall by x 4 ft long... They're longer than that in actuality, but the extra length is just one or two vines reaching out. It's something like that. We were planning on giving it one more year then giving up and planning Catawba or something like that. We planted Catawba last year and already have grapes on that one.
Growing up in Jersey my grandfather had some very large purple grapes ,with fat seeds inside. They were the sweetest grape, I can remember to this day. Here in Arizona now I had a great Vine growing pretty well. Had a bunch of green grapes and then all of a sudden some kind of Mold hit and they were gone.I am now a Subscriber. Guess I have to go out and buy some grapes now. Wish I knew about your channel when I had that Mold. Just a🌵🐎 thought from the🤠 cowboy from🗽🇺🇸 Scottsdale Arizona @unclemartin7711
We love freezing them, which makes a great snack to help cool you do on these hot Florida days.
We found muscadines on the property! Just did some cuttings and hope they grow!
Definitely make some juice!
Sounds great!
Did they root?
Cool video ma'am , tyvm.
I just moved into a new place down by the river (we just had a terrible flood here/Erwin Tn) and discovered that one small, lone muscadine grape plant survived the chaos, so I wanted to tend to her and see what happens. This video is literally PERFECT.
You're impressively knowledgeable on the subject and a good, clear-speaking narrator.
Have a good one.
I have just realized recently that I have wild Muscadine Grapes and also Beauty Berries growing on my vacant land that is literally raw land in the middle of nowhere. Lucky me!
😅‼️‼️🙏🏽 🔥
me too, I have made jelly with the grapes, I just planted more muscadines to make a good harvest. the beauty berry I leave for the animals, as I don't like the juice/jelly
I had my first muscadine grape yesterday, it was so good I had to find the original name so I can get some plants… I will be growing some in the spring of 25. Thank you for sharing ❤
That is awesome!
The amount of information you provided in the first 7 minutes and 30 seconds was mind-blowingly helpful. Really well done!
Thank you so much! I love sharing my knowledge. Hope it helps.
I’ve been using wild muscadines and dark amber raw wild flower honey to make mead with. It’s absolutely delicious
Was out planting 60 or so thornless blackberry bushes and a small muscadine vine growing on a pine tree caught my eye. Great info as I may try to make a few 50 foot rows of them.
Oh wow lucky!
Wild ones will produce less grapes.
Explanation was excellent!!
Muscadines are amazing for fresh eating. Totally worth the work.
I agree!
And gonna be selling a ton of these muscadine grape 🍇 vines soon. I have a ton of them all over my property and all are producing very large amounts and very quality 🍇
Hello Jerra
Loved the video but a quick comment ... the Muscadines are Vitis rotundifolia, separate from the fox grapes Vitis labrusca and the European grape Vitis vinifera
Keep on presenting ...
OMG thanks for letting me know. I don't know how I messed that part up.
@@JerrasGarden When you busy doing videos, easy to overlook small things
I'm really wanting to plant some muscadines from seed and I've been collecting seeds from ones i've eaten. I have 2 challenges though. 1. my yard is literally smaller than my dining room table and my HOA is really strict about plant heights. 2. I have no idea what variety my seeds are. Hopefully I can get creative and figure out a way to make it work in my "backyard"
Jelly, jam,wine, juice, pie... You can use these many ways... Just a little more work removing seeds and peels but it is an excellent pie 🤤
I have a fruit and vegetable strainer attachment for my KitchenAid mixer that removes skin and seeds quick! I use it to make tomato sauce too.
Best muscadine video ever!
Thank you! I'm almost done making the video showing how I turned all of these grapes into muscadine grape wine so stay tuned.
Excellent video-it really was! I learned so much and am excited to start my own journey. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
I just bought a muscadine grape seedling here in Brazil, your video is giving me a lot of information about what to expect from this specie.
What cultivar do you have? Yours are much bigger than mine. Mine are also bitter and not good for fresh eating. Thank you for all of your great videos.
I have quite a few, but the one in this video is Alachua
I remember picking these back in my hometown in Florida. We called them Scumpalums as they were kinda bitter before coming ripe.
Don't underestimate the pleasure of peeling and eating a muscadine grape. I only wish I learned this 10 years ago... all those years wasted!
LOL yea they have been given a bad reputation but the newer cultivars are great for fresh eating
You don’t peel muscadine’s
@@CharlesMccullough-g2h Back in the day you did. But not anymore too much
Peel? Lol
Peel? Whyyyy the skin is good and good for you
Thanks!
Yummmmmmmmy I'm growing some and needed your tips ❤❤ thank you!!!
Wow, very informative! thanks Jerra.
Your very welcome!
So much knowledge imparted thank you for taking the time to go as in depth as you did
Glad you enjoyed it!
I have so many growing in my yard now! So sweet
Yes they are!
Great video
Great information. Thanks for sharing. Cool shirt too.
Thanks for watching!
Loved your video! I’m I’m Central Florida and bought a few Southern Home grapes about 2 months ago. It is now October and they are going dormant, and I had not yet planted them in the ground. Any tips on keeping them alive through the winter? Wasn’t sure if I should leave them in the little 4 inch pots or up pot them. We plan to make a vertical trellis to grow them on.
Fantastic video 😊😊😊
thank you for your advice, I just bought my first grape vine!! It is about 3 feet tall.
Yay! Your going to love growing grapes/muscadines
My muscadine vine is still to young to produce yet, still vining over its arch. Can't wait to try the grapes from it! Your harvest was amazing! How old is your vine?
Mine are about 3 years old
I’m growing Alachua muscadine grape. This is year two and it’s thriving on a cattle panel trellis. It’s loaded with grapes and I heard they will be ripe in August or September. I need to learn to make 🍷 wine.
This was really helpful. Thank you.
WOW :^ O!!! LOOK AT THOSE 2 GRAPES!!!
This video is so helpful. You really did your research. I’ve been keeping notes on my research. But this video covers it all including making my decision on which varieties to grow. I live in north Alabama and wanted big muscadines for fresh eating and jelly with extended season harvesting. So the types you mentioned for July-Sept harvest is what I’ll get. Is there any reason you didn’t mention Ison’s brand of muscadine? I’d just read so much about them I thought they were one of the best since they’re self fertile. Also I made jam with mine. I cut in half took out seeds, boiled, then blended them for a few seconds. It was great. Is wasted so much in the first batch thinking you couldn’t use the skins so decided on jam.
I didn't mention Ison's because its not one of the common cultivars grown in Florida so I don't have much experience with them, but they are a great resource for all things muscadine. They also have a lot of good RUclips videos on growing muscadines too.
I am building my arbor this week, I am just using steel cables along the top so hopefully that will make it easier to harvest instead of using the wooden trellis you are using.
I am AMAZED with your grapes!! I am growing a grape plan my neighnor gave me and inhave no odea what typenit is. I just built a trellis fornit. It jas 4 main stems. It is its 2nd year in groundm last year it grew from.a stub that was almost destroy3d. One small.shoot came out and i protected it qmd it grew into a long vine but no flowers. I cut it backnall the way to 12 inches above ground and notnit looks sonmuch thicker and healthier with leaves budding... i live in Central California...i hope intrimmednit down ok. Unhqbe no idea what I was doing. I furtilezednit a month or 2 ago before the spring. I am crossing my fingers. Based on your video inshould cut the other brqnches fromnthe base and leave only n one main one..right? Should inwait till end of this year or donit now??
Jerra, this has been so helpful! I'm just getting started with muscadines and scuppernogs. Hoping to get a canning juice steamer extractor to make jellies and juice. Have you ever heard if their leaves can be used for Dolmas and other stuffed grape leaf recipes?
Hi. Yes you can use the leaves to make dolmades or stuffed grape leaves, just make sure you use the younger leaves.
@@JerrasGarden Thank you, Jerra. I'll do that. Most likely pickle up a bunch while they young to have on hand. 🙂
Awesome job! Very informative!! 👏😁
Glad it was helpful!
Great Video, how long does it take to get grapes from new plants?
I bought them as 3 gallon size containers I think? And it took 2 years before it started fruiting.
Thanks for the lesson! We have a ranch in Oklahoma and discovered wild Muscadine growing in different parts. Before this year, we hadn't even heard of it. So now we want to be purposeful in growing vines on trellises. There's a lot of deer. What can be done to minimize them eating the fruit? What other animal threats are there? We have armadillo, possum, hogs, and rabbits too.
A lot of animals like to eat them. Quite honestly I am no expert about keeping critters out because its not an issue I deal with in my garden. I have 6FT privacy fencing and am in an urban neighborhood. But if I did have an issue, I would probably build an enclosed garden with fencing. Kind of hard to do with long rows of muscadine grapes though.
@@JerrasGarden OK, thanks for the shout back and for the information!
Thank you for sharing!!
You are so welcome!
How often you replenish your site? It’s sold out now for live plants.
Thanks Jerra, this is just what I was looking for. I am not far from you, Citrus County and have lots of these on my property. Am I allowed to take these to the market without a license? It seems all the info I come across is for huge companies.
They r so good 😊
Yep! Very sweet if you pick the right cultivar.
I recently found a muscadine in my back yard in FLA . 9a zone. It is fruiting now. Can I take cuttings now? Or do I have to wait? I want to start a trellis in a different area of my yard.
Yes you can!
Loved the video!😊
Glad you liked it!!
great video, letting the wild muscadine grow in my yard. we'll see if I ever get fruit or not lol
Good luck!
I’m sure these are the grapes I am growing. They look exactly like yours. They taste great but afterwards my lips burn and they feel itchy and so do my hands. Is this normal and safe to keep eating? I do not use any pesticides in my garden.
Is there a variety that does not lose its leaves in December? Im in zone 10a
I just discovered muscadine. Had never had them before and love them. Would love to grow them. Where can I find a vine? Is there. Particular place online where I can order it?
I have plants for a few different cultivars on my website www.jerrasgarden.com
You can also find lots of online retailers or check your local nursery
When will you have more for sale
What muscadine cultivars would do well in zone 9b in northern California. 30 degree winters, 110 degree summers. Thank you
All of them will produce well in your zone. I would choose the cultivar based on what you want to make with it. Some are better for fresh eating (Southern Home, Delicious, Alachua). Others are better for making wine (Noble).
We have 3 plants and they seem to not do well. How long will it take to become established? Our first plant and first year we had great success but the second year it died. You mentioned proon8ng videos but I didn’t see anything listed. Thank you for your video and if you have any suggestions to help m I would appreciate it.
How long it takes to get established depends on the size of the plant your starting out with. Usually it takes at least 2 years to get established and start producing consistently. I'm sorry I didn't realize that I didn't add the links to the other videos. I fixed that now.
I highly recommend you check out this RUclips channel for lots of tips on growing and pruning muscadines in the long row type of setup: www.youtube.com/@KinfolkFarmofGeorgia
I want to plant in ground but I have red clay soil..do you have any tips
Thanks
Could these grow in Colorado?
Anything you can't use or anything that goes bad can be used for compost if you have your own compost bin. All rotten fruits and veggies are good for compost to make sure your soil has everything it needs for next season's grow
Looking to grow plants for the gopher tortoise I have living in my yard :)
My family won't eat the skin, but that's my fav part
Can you show how to grow from seed.The shells of seeds are very tough.
How often would I water my muscadine vine if I were to have it in the same barrel? I am getting a blanc du bois, and I want it in a pot with a Trellis in the pot, too, or behind it (not sure yet). Any tips?
Hiiii I think you emailed me and I answered. If not lemme know.
@JerrasGarden yes, you did, thank you. :)
Thank you. I just bought an Alachua from Lowes a couple of weeks ago. Now there are large brown rust looking spots on a lot of the leaves. Do you have any idea of what it could be? Some of the spots are as big as half the leaf.
I would guess its a leaf disease like rust or blight. Spray with 1 cup hydrogen peroxide per gallon of water. Make sure there is adequate ventilation so the leaves dry quickly.
Did you say which grape you grew and I missed it ?
I believe it's the two varieties of self pollinating muscadine grapes she sells on her website.
When do you think you’ll have more plant to buy?
It is going to be a while. If you want to get a restock notice please add your email here: mailchi.mp/f696838283c9/untitled-page
I live in texas and they are native here and at this point they seem invasive😂 they are vines along every fenceline and everywhere in the woods they are growing up trees with vines over a inch thick but not all are fruiting idk why
Most wild muscadines are male so when you find a vine with fruit (female) take good care of it! I don’t know if there is a way to distinguish between the vines other than the presence or absence of fruit.
will they work in Oregon I live 20min south of Portland.
Where can I purchase seeds? I know that they can be found on Amazon but I do not know if the sellers are reliable.
Jerra great info. about grapes. By the way it is imporTANT not importANT..
Would these grapes grow roots by stem cuttings from the pruning branches ? Thank you for your info.
Yes
هل يمكن زراعتها بالبذور
Definitely 🍷 wine.
👍
I ripped out all wild plants that were on my property. really didnt think I would be planting. But here we are. I have 2 grapes and will be getting muskies.. Will be using 15 to 20 gal grow bags. looks like these require more trellis than grapes.
can you freeze it and eat them after.
You can freeze them and make juice, wine, or jelly with it later on. It wont be the same for fresh eating though.
how many did you plant or have in that harvest?
I only have 2 vines for this cultivar. At maturity, each vine can produce 35lbs.
Are these hard to grow? I live in OK.
Muscadine grapes are super easy to grow. They are native to the USA and tolerate a wide range of conditions. I would not reccomend to grow in zones 6 and below.
How do I germinate thebseeds? I want to create seedlings.
Muscadines are usually propagated by cuttings. Especially since the majority of the more modern and better tasting cultivars are hybrids. So plants grown from seeds would not be the same.
Does it removes calcium build up in the valves of the heart?
I'm not sure. That would be a good question for a doctor.
@@JerrasGarden Doctors knows nothing about holistic whatsoever. Will dig in more.
I have them growing in my yard but none are growing fruit, how come?
The vines have to be mature enough to support fruit production. How big are your plants and how long ago were they planted?
do the bees take over the vines? what is your method to f control for wasp or hornets and other dangerous bees
I notice honey bees like to "drink" the juice out of the grapes. So I harvest very early in the morning before they show up. I had a small hornets nest in one of the vines last year. I just sprayed it off with a hard blast from my water hose. Have not noticed any other issues so far.
A month ago, my partner cut down a vine. Later, I recognized it as a Muscadine; he didn’t know what it was. I’ve found several small Muscadine vines in several locations. I have no idea of the variety except they’re wild. I understand they are dioecious (male plants and female plants) and I probably won’t know what I have until they bloom.
What I’m thinking of doing is moving three or four plants to within ten or twenty feet of each other and let them intertwine. The odds will be better that I’ll get at least one male and one female, maybe two females. I don’t want to buy a plant from the store when I have them on my property.
Do you think it’s a waste of time? I haven’t seen the fruit since moving here eight years ago so something has been eating it so it might be worth growing what’s here.
You wont know until it fruits. The quality of the fruit might be great or maybe not so great.
Make wine please and teach us please. ❤
That's the plan! I just got all the supplies so its going to take a few weeks for me to film the whole process. Cross my fingers it comes out good lol
Love red seedless grapes 🍇 from the USA so they don’t travel on a ship 🚢 that’s sprayed with chemicals to rid the ship of bugs.
Grapes for earrings
LOL
I bought muscadine and scuppernongs because i thought they would do well and produce a lot without a lot of attention. We're in our 4 th year and haven't see a single grape, nor even a single flower. Does anyone here know of any common mistakes that people make that might cause this?
How big are the vines? The plants have to be a certain size/maturity to start producing.
@@JerrasGarden Ahhh ok.
I'm not sure how to describe the size. The base of the vine is about 1/2 inch thick. The total bulk of the branches and leaves is probably about 2ft thick x 2ft tall by x 4 ft long... They're longer than that in actuality, but the extra length is just one or two vines reaching out. It's something like that.
We were planning on giving it one more year then giving up and planning Catawba or something like that. We planted Catawba last year and already have grapes on that one.
Why grow them when one can walk in the woods and get all you want?
Growing up in Jersey my grandfather had some very large purple grapes ,with fat seeds inside. They were the sweetest grape, I can remember to this day. Here in Arizona now I had a great Vine growing pretty well. Had a bunch of green grapes and then all of a sudden some kind of Mold hit and they were gone.I am now a Subscriber. Guess I have to go out and buy some grapes now. Wish I knew about your channel when I had that Mold. Just a🌵🐎 thought from the🤠 cowboy from🗽🇺🇸 Scottsdale Arizona
@unclemartin7711
Hi and welcome! I would try again. Muscadines should grow well in your area.
@@JerrasGarden OK Jerra, that's the plan.Those are the very 🍇 I'll be planting.👍🤠🐎🏜🐴 🐞🗽🇺🇸