Hi,
Could a Crandall be tied into an upright habit?
Possibly a tomato cage would do the job. Anyone tried this?
regards.
Tom
"Lon J. Rombough" wrote:
If you cut all the shoots off a Crandall, the new
growth will be very upright and the next season it will be a mass of bloom
and fruit. Only after that does it begin to droop, as the shoots
get older. With this in mind, I tried alternating with several
bushes - prune one to the ground one year, alternate to the other(s) the
next. That way you always have part of them in the upright, attractive
phase. The alternative is to cut out all the two year and older shoots
every year to induce the plant to keep pushing the new, upright growth.
-Lon Rombough
Grapes, unusual fruits, writing, consulting, more, at http://www.hevanet.com/lonrom
See new additions to the site, Feb. 2001, plus word on my grape book.
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From: ribes60@aol.com
To: nafex@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [nafex] Spring pruning: currants, apple, grape
Date: Sat, Mar 31, 2001, 7:10 PM
I have grown Crandalls for a number of years
and they do get scraggle, and
they will bend to the ground with the weight of fruit.I
try to take out most
of the side branches and tie most of the main upright
canes to a wire
trellis.I think now that if I were re-doing the rows,
I would do them like I
do raspberries. I put two steel fenceposts at each end
of the rows, about 30
to 36 in apart and run wire to each of them. This will
allow the row to be
supported by the wire. I would run two wires, one about
15 in off the ground
and the other about 36 in off the ground. Crandalls put
on a very heavy load
of fruit.
Ed Mashburn
Northumberland BerryWorks
707 Front Street
Northumberland, PA 17857
Ed@currants.com
WWW.Currants.com
(570) 473-9910
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--
Thomas Olenio
Ontario, Canada
Hardiness Zone 6a
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