I was taking down my wild grapes. Which were engulfing my fruit trees? And in the process, I got ahold of whole bunch of wild grapes and I ate him for a whole day while I worked and the next day my knees felt so good. They hadn't felt that good in 20 years. It was a temporary effect and it's faded away a little each day after that, but. I'd like to be able to grow Em.If.I could do it without taking up my whole yard and not having any wild grapes
@@josephdupont wow, the grapes really seem like good medicine for you! Thanks for sharing that story! Perhaps you could put up a trellis, or plant them near a fence so they have something to climb. They can definitely take down trees if you just let them grow anywhere though.
@@josephdupont wow, the grapes really seem like good medicine for you! Thanks for sharing that story! Perhaps you could put up a trellis, or plant them near a fence so they have something to climb. They can definitely take down trees if you just let them grow anywhere though.
Joseph , when winter comes and the vine goes dormant . Ie all the leaves have come off and about a month before spring or even 2 it doesn’t really matter that much , cut some vine canes that grew this year not the old ones , cut below a node and have about 4 nodes in each cutting from the cane ,you can make as many as you want , best to always do more than you need , put some sand in pots or what ever you have I do mine in sand from the river ,no rocks . Put 2 nodes from the cutting below the sand and leave 2 sticking out, you can put a few in each pot , I put rooting hormone on mine but you don’t have to , water them now and then through winter and in spring you will see the leaves starting to bud , leave them in the pots for as long as you can to develop a good amount of roots , after that plant them in there own pots , sell them or give them to others , planting the ground and train on a wire between two posts , prune them in winter when they are dormant leaving some buds to grow new canes the next year and get more fruit. Use you tube , plenty videos to show you what to do.
They grow evasive were I live, After trying to constantly cut them down, I started to train them around my fences, then trim back in the fall. After a few years the grapes start to get a little bigger, the vines grow up trees and wrap around them all over, those do not have grapes, just the ones that have established.
I believe I found grapes the leaves are the same shape and pointy. Although they are kinda yellow is oct in the east coast. The vines are red and brown and the stems they grow on are green and brown. The fruit is purple and stains very easy. Has 2/3 seeds per fruit and is small fruit. Taste a bit sour but is good to me. My dad tried them and said they were poisonous but I don’t believe he knows jack squat. I ate like a dozen today and don’t feel any worse than usual. Edit: It’s not pokeberries is not moonseeds based off leaves.
They grow all around my house. Most people won’t eat them unless I’m with them because there is a deadly vine here with similar fruit. It’s easy cuz the flesh is white and bad fruit are purple fleshed. I love them wild grapes I fill up on them.
Deadly vine might be moonseed. It has a smooth leaf and when you crush it's berry, it will have the seed shape of a moon rather than 2 tear draped seeds
The ones here in Texas are massive. And we get buckets full everyday. The skin is bitter but the flesh is store quality. The leaves here are super fuzzy on the back like a muscadine and are maybe a hybrid. My dad owned a rare herb and plant nursery growing up and mamma raised me ital so I know what’s up.
@@hawthornherbals it’s nice here because the only berries that are poisonous that resemble anything edible are far between and very obvious except the grapeaplikes Must be a pain up north….
Nice video! I came here bcuz I'm trying to ID the wild grapes growing here in my yard, here in Central Texas. Then when I do find out, I'll be consuming a few for myself. But leaving most for the local fauna. So I was just curious about the nutritional value. I do have a couple questions- ▪︎ What area of the country are you in? So many videos I've been watching forget to mention this! I found out that here in Texas, we have a minimum of 80 different varieties of wild grapes! And what grows along the upper East coast of the U.S. will be different than what grows along the Southern coast, and still different here in the middle of the U.S. So each region has different varieties. And second - ▪︎ The Moon Vine: I'm still not sure what areas the Moon Vine grows in, I'm not sure if we have that here where I am. Maybe we do, I just haven't found any - yet. Do you know which areas the Moon Vine is indigenous to?
I'm in Southeastern Ontario, Canada. Amazing that you have so many different grape varieties in Texas! Here they are in abundance because the grapes love the limestone rock that is prevalent in these parts. I'm not too familiar with the plants of Texas so not sure whether the Canada moonseed extends that far south. Best of luck with your research!
We are also sitting on a giant shelf of limestone. It's called the Edwards Plateau. It covers about half the state. Lots of stone carvers here too! Interesting how our two areas are so similar, yet soooo very far away! Thanks for the info ♡
@Dan Wipper DEFINITELY wild grapes would have to be drought tolerant here in Texas! They put their roots in deep and get their moisture that way, so you're right. Any area that stays wet on the surface would be waaay too wet for wild grapes. Altho, they would probably love sitting near the dry edge of those wet areas!
So nice
Thanks! Great video!
I was taking down my wild grapes. Which were engulfing my fruit trees? And in the process, I got ahold of whole bunch of wild grapes and I ate him for a whole day while I worked and the next day my knees felt so good. They hadn't felt that good in 20 years. It was a temporary effect and it's faded away a little each day after that, but. I'd like to be able to grow Em.If.I could do it without taking up my whole yard and not having any wild grapes
@@josephdupont wow, the grapes really seem like good medicine for you! Thanks for sharing that story! Perhaps you could put up a trellis, or plant them near a fence so they have something to climb. They can definitely take down trees if you just let them grow anywhere though.
@@josephdupont wow, the grapes really seem like good medicine for you! Thanks for sharing that story! Perhaps you could put up a trellis, or plant them near a fence so they have something to climb. They can definitely take down trees if you just let them grow anywhere though.
Im thinking about doing that. the roo t system is robust. e@@hawthornherbals
Joseph , when winter comes and the vine goes dormant . Ie all the leaves have come off and about a month before spring or even 2 it doesn’t really matter that much , cut some vine canes that grew this year not the old ones , cut below a node and have about 4 nodes in each cutting from the cane ,you can make as many as you want , best to always do more than you need , put some sand in pots or what ever you have I do mine in sand from the river ,no rocks . Put 2 nodes from the cutting below the sand and leave 2 sticking out, you can put a few in each pot , I put rooting hormone on mine but you don’t have to , water them now and then through winter and in spring you will see the leaves starting to bud , leave them in the pots for as long as you can to develop a good amount of roots , after that plant them in there own pots , sell them or give them to others , planting the ground and train on a wire between two posts , prune them in winter when they are dormant leaving some buds to grow new canes the next year and get more fruit. Use you tube , plenty videos to show you what to do.
They grow evasive were I live, After trying to constantly cut them down, I started to train them around my fences, then trim back in the fall. After a few years the grapes start to get a little bigger, the vines grow up trees and wrap around them all over, those do not have grapes, just the ones that have established.
I believe I found grapes the leaves are the same shape and pointy. Although they are kinda yellow is oct in the east coast. The vines are red and brown and the stems they grow on are green and brown. The fruit is purple and stains very easy. Has 2/3 seeds per fruit and is small fruit. Taste a bit sour but is good to me. My dad tried them and said they were poisonous but I don’t believe he knows jack squat. I ate like a dozen today and don’t feel any worse than usual.
Edit: It’s not pokeberries is not moonseeds based off leaves.
Thank you for the lesson. I found a few vines in my backyard so this actually helped alot.
Wonderful! So glad it helped with your ID. Good news you found some in your yard!
They grow all around my house. Most people won’t eat them unless I’m with them because there is a deadly vine here with similar fruit. It’s easy cuz the flesh is white and bad fruit are purple fleshed. I love them wild grapes I fill up on them.
Deadly vine might be moonseed. It has a smooth leaf and when you crush it's berry, it will have the seed shape of a moon rather than 2 tear draped seeds
The ones here in Texas are massive. And we get buckets full everyday. The skin is bitter but the flesh is store quality. The leaves here are super fuzzy on the back like a muscadine and are maybe a hybrid. My dad owned a rare herb and plant nursery growing up and mamma raised me ital so I know what’s up.
Interesting! So many different varieties out there!
@@hawthornherbals it’s nice here because the only berries that are poisonous that resemble anything edible are far between and very obvious except the grapeaplikes Must be a pain up north….
love your hair :)
Thank you!!
Hi! What region are you based? I’m in New York and I’m trying to get better with grape ID!
I'm in southeastern Ontario. Mostly we have the riverside grapes around here (Vitis riparia)
Summer grapes
What part of Canada are you
Great lakes region, southeastern Ontario
👍
Nice video!
I came here bcuz I'm trying to ID the wild grapes growing here in my yard, here in Central Texas.
Then when I do find out, I'll be consuming a few for myself. But leaving most for the local fauna. So I was just curious about the nutritional value.
I do have a couple questions-
▪︎ What area of the country are you in?
So many videos I've been watching forget to mention this!
I found out that here in Texas, we have a minimum of 80 different varieties of wild grapes! And what grows along the upper East coast of the U.S. will be different than what grows along the Southern coast, and still different here in the middle of the U.S.
So each region has different varieties.
And second -
▪︎ The Moon Vine:
I'm still not sure what areas the Moon Vine grows in, I'm not sure if we have that here where I am. Maybe we do, I just haven't found any - yet.
Do you know which areas the Moon Vine is indigenous to?
I'm in Southeastern Ontario, Canada.
Amazing that you have so many different grape varieties in Texas!
Here they are in abundance because the grapes love the limestone rock that is prevalent in these parts.
I'm not too familiar with the plants of Texas so not sure whether the Canada moonseed extends that far south. Best of luck with your research!
We are also sitting on a giant shelf of limestone. It's called the Edwards Plateau.
It covers about half the state.
Lots of stone carvers here too!
Interesting how our two areas are so similar, yet soooo very far away!
Thanks for the info ♡
@Dan Wipper DEFINITELY wild grapes would have to be drought tolerant here in Texas! They put their roots in deep and get their moisture that way, so you're right. Any area that stays wet on the surface would be waaay too wet for wild grapes. Altho, they would probably love sitting near the dry edge of those wet areas!
Wonderful. Thanks for the visual lesson. There's so much out there if you only know what to look for. ❤
Thanks for watching Brenda! Indeed it's true. We are surrounded by nature's gifts.
*This sh!t is a tree killer .... I HHAAATTEEEE it.*
Your skin is so pretty…