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Humulus lupulus Jupiter - Common Hop

Humulus lupulus Jupiter
Hop, Common Hop

3,8/5
3 reviews
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1 reviews

Ordered on 6th February 2024, removed from my order on 21st May... Could be very good but I couldn't tell.

Manu, 24/05/2024

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This plant carries a 12 months recovery warranty

More information

Making your own beer with a plant from the garden becomes possible with this genuine brewing hop. This variety flowers at a very young age, its summer flowering is abundant and gives way to abundant fruiting. Its cones provide a pleasantly spicy aromatic flavour to the beer. It is also a vigorous climbing plant that is very ornamental and can be grown in any good garden soil that remains slightly moist.
Flower size
2 cm
Height at maturity
5 m
Spread at maturity
2.50 m
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -29°C
Soil moisture
Moist soil, Damp soil
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Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time March to May
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Flowering time July to September
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Description

Humulus lupulus 'Jupiter ' is a floriferous and productive variety of hops, particularly aromatic with a spicy fragrance, selected for brewing beer. This variety, which flowers at a young age, allows amateur gardeners to try their hand at brewing. Its green to blonde cones, harvested in summer, can also be used to make sedative and soothing herbal teas. Very hardy and perennial by its fleshy root, this liana is also appreciated for its exuberance and luxuriant foliage reminiscent of that of a vine. In the ornamental garden or in the vegetable patch, 'Jupiter' hops are perfect for embellishing and quickly hiding any unsightly support.

Humulus lupulus belongs to the Cannabaceae family, just like hemp and... the hackberry. It is native to Europe, temperate Asia, and northern Africa where it populates cool and humid areas. It is a perennial herbaceous liana with a large fleshy root. The plant regenerates all its above-ground vegetation each year and spends the winter dormant underground. Hops are often a dioecious plant, meaning there are male and female plants. 'Jupiter' has both male and female flowers, so a single plant is sufficient to obtain fruits.

In spring, 'Jupiter' hops develop herbaceous shoots that emerge from the slightly suckering stump, quickly twining around any available support. Their growth is very fast, reaching approximately 4-5m (13-16ft) in one season. An adult plant will therefore occupy about 5m (16ft) in height with a spread of 2-3m (7-10ft). They have a quadrangular section and bear rough leaves, beautifully cut into 3 to 5 ovate, pointed, and toothed lobes. The colour of the leaves is a bright green. The female inflorescences appear in summer, from June to August depending on the climate. These are green catkins that will turn into cones after pollination. These ovoid cones have a scaly appearance, they are green-blonde in colour when ripe and covered with a fragrant and powdery resin called lupulin, which gives bitterness to beer. They are usually harvested in September.

In the ornamental garden, 'Jupiter' hops are an excellent complement to a climbing rose or climber and go well with a sturdy clematis with blue flowers (Blue Angel), white (Miss Bateman) or pink. An evergreen honeysuckle like Lonicera similis delavayi will form an interesting combination with this climber, compensating for its absence in winter while flowering in summer. This hops plant will give a second life to an old tree, conceal a tired garden shed, a garage, or an unsightly structure, and beautify a pergola, a long fence... The flowers, picked in September, make beautiful dried bouquets.

The female inflorescences, the cones, have been used to flavour beer since the 8th century. Previously, hops were only used to preserve beer. Currently (despite modern preservation technologies), this tradition remains for the light bitterness and flavour that hops bring. The young twining shoots can also be consumed in the same way as asparagus.

Flowering

Flower colour green
Flowering time July to September
Inflorescence Panicle
Flower size 2 cm
Fragrance Very fragrant
Good for cut flowers Cut flower blooms

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour green

Plant habit

Height at maturity 5 m
Spread at maturity 2.50 m
Growth rate very fast

Botanical data

Genus

Humulus

Species

lupulus

Cultivar

Jupiter

Family

Cannabaceae

Other common names

Hop, Common Hop

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Product reference176091

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Planting and care

The Jupiter hop is easy to grow in ordinary and deep soil and can tolerate all exposures with a preference for partial shade. This variety tolerates sunny exposures quite well, except in the hottest areas. The plant shows a preference for clay-limestone and very fertile soils, rich in humus. Plant the Hop in soil that remains moist and provide it with a good basal fertiliser at planting. It attaches itself thanks to the small hooks present on the twining stems. Install a trellis if you want to cover a wall, help them at the beginning to grow in all directions to evenly cover their support. The stems easily detach from their support in autumn, as they dry and die with the first frost. Prune your plant every year to a height of 25cm (10in) in February or March; remember to remove (and possibly replant) the suckers that will otherwise become invasive.

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Planting period

Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time March to May

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow, Woodland edge
Type of use Climbing
Hardiness Hardy down to -29°C (USDA zone 5) Show map
Ease of cultivation Beginner
Planting density 1 per m2
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Any
Soil type Clayey (heavy), Clayey-chalky (heavy and alkaline), Silty-loamy (rich and light)
Soil moisture Moist soil, Damp soil, rich, deep and clayey

Care

Pruning instructions Prune to 25cm (10in) in late winter.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time February to March
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
3,8/5
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