Pest and Diseases of Grapes

Author: Abraham Kiyoski

 

There are those who have tried out the Labruscan varieties from Ontario. These cannot be grown under Guyot pruning methods but must be cultivated by a simpler system such as one main rod plus six strong side growths, which are pruned back hard each January.

They could also be grown on the \'Grow as you like\' system, being allowed to scramble over a trellis or cover a fence or wall. Under this system very little pruning is necessary, though it does pay to cut back the fruiting laterals in the summer at two leaves above a bunch.

The leaves of the vines grown against walls are often attacked by Red Spiders, and the answer here is to syringe the under surface of the foliage in the evening, twice a week, from the beginning of June onwards. In cases of bad attack some liquid derris should be added to the water.

Do not, however, allow 12 rods to be produced or you may not be able to ripen the fruit. Stick to 6 or 7 rods tied to strong bamboos or stakes to form a goblet and gradually these shoots will bear more bunches of grapes up to, say, 8 per rod. Do not be tempted to reduce the pruning by cutting say to 5 buds, and do not be tempted either to try and make the vine crop more heavily.

Each of these laterals is allowed to bear one bunch of fruit this season. As the cordon is to remain tied horizontally to the lower wire, these laterals are pruned back in January to within one plump bud of their base. This bud, of course, will grow the next spring and once again the lateral will be trained upwards and tied to the top wire. This next year it will probably bear two good bunches and the year after maybe three bunches. From then on the crop will be three or four bunches per lateral.

When growing a vine against a wall the pruning may be similar. The rod instead of being taken along a lower wire can be trained, with a main rod growing upwards and with side permanent rods trained out at right angles. Thus a series of horizontal cordons are formed and the laterals they produce are pruned back hard each January. These are tied to wires stretched tightly in between the main wires.

In many areas, grape fruit are being grown under glass in the garden.

Insect and Rodent Pests Recommended Products

Pests Headlines


Pests in schools in St. John the Baptist Parish test patience - NOLA.com


NOLA.com

Pests in schools in St. John the Baptist Parish test patience
NOLA.com
By Jennifer Boquet, The Times-Picayune The St. John the Baptist Parish school district is working to resolve communications issues that one board member says have led to unresolved problems with pests in its schools. Board member Albert "Ali" Burl ...

and more »

Read more...


Pest control was a scratch - Albany Times Union


Pest control was a scratch
Albany Times Union
By Dennis Yusko SARATOGA SPRINGS — The director of the Saratoga Springs Housing Authority cut a longtime pest control program for hundreds of public housing units in the years before bedbugs invaded Stonequist Apartments, the extermination company's ...

and more »

Read more...


Nearly five rat call outs per day in south Bucks - Bucks Free Press


Nearly five rat call outs per day in south Bucks
Bucks Free Press
By James Nadal » PEST control teams from two south Bucks councils dealt with 3450 call outs about rats in two years, nearly five per day, figures show. Vermin extermination officials attended 6221 cases of pests in total, with creatures ranging from ...

Read more...


Pest concerns in Saratoga Springs - WXXA


Pest concerns in Saratoga Springs
WXXA
Wright is angry because, he says, months ago the Housing Authority refused to let him pay for his own private pest control company to come in to treat the problem. Wright said, "I can go into my home, but it's very limited. I don't like to go in there, ...

and more »

Read more...


Elephant, komodo solution to pests - The Australian


Australian Times

Elephant, komodo solution to pests
The Australian
In the wild, the rhinos and elephants would eat tons (tonnes) of feral grass each day, while Komodo dragons would end the need for expensive shooting or poisoning programs to deal with destructive pests such as pigs and goats. Professor Bowman, head of ...
Australia 'needs elephants' to battle pests and firesAustralian Times
Elephants 'would be a 10-tonne cane toad'Herald Sun
Elephants could battle pests in AustraliaNinemsn
New Zealand Herald -Adelaide Now -Globe and Mail
all 290 news articles »

Read more...