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Vitis vinifera Fanny - Grape Vine

Vitis vinifera FANNY COV
Common Grape Vine, European Grape, Wine Grape

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A hardy, quite productive Hungarian variety of table grape. It produces large clusters of yellow berries with a hint of orange, with crisp and juicy, slightly tart flesh. Its dried grapes are ready to be harvested from late September to October. Fanny has a semi-erect habit and is moderately vigorous, it can be trained on a trellis. It thrives in full sun, in neutral to alkaline well-drained soil. An interesting variety for the garden, with beautiful autumn foliage colouration.
Flavour
Sour
Height at maturity
3 m
Spread at maturity
3 m
Exposure
Sun
Self-fertilising
Best planting time October to November
Recommended planting time February to April, September to November
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Flowering time June to July
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Harvest time September to October
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Description

The Fanny grape is a Hungarian vine variety with a semi-erect, moderately vigorous habit, capable of reaching a height of 3m when trained on a trellis. This variety produces yellow table grapes that turn orange at full ripeness. The flesh is firm and crunchy, juicy with a slightly acidic taste. The large clusters of slightly elliptical berries are not very susceptible to major vine diseases. This vine will thrive in most well-drained, neutral to calcareous soils in sunny locations. It is cold hardy.

The wine grape (Vitis vinifera) grew wild over 5000 years ago in North and Central America, Europe, as well as Central and Eastern Asia. The subspecies sylvestris still exists today as a climbing vine, growing on forest edges and capable of reaching great heights in trees. The current varieties, referred to as grapevine cultivars, belong to the vinifera subspecies (although there are other cultivated species, but they are very minor). Economically, wine grapevines dominate over table grapevines.

Fanny is an interspecific hybrid obtained in 1970 by József Csizmazia, a Hungarian breeder, by crossing the Villard Blanc variety, obtained in the Drôme region, with a hybrid itself resulting from the crossbreeding of (Teli Muskotaly x Olimpia). Fanny contains genes from 3 vine species: Vitis berlandieri, an American vine that provided phylloxera-resistant rootstocks, Vitis rupestris, another American species, and Vitis vinifera, our "classic" grapevine.
This moderately vigorous vine with a semi-erect habit has small to medium-sized leaves, with 5 well-defined lobes and a rather elongated shape. It buds 4 days after Chasselas, a reference variety for vine phenological stages. These leaves have a beautiful bright green colour from the start and often develop beautiful autumn colours, ranging from coppery yellow to red, giving it some ornamental interest. This vine flowers in June-July, producing small greenish-yellow flowers that develop into large, loosely packed fruit clusters.
The berries start off greenish-yellow, then turn golden yellow with hints of orange at full ripeness in late September and October. These medium to large grapes are crisp and very juicy. They can be harvested until mid-October. This variety is highly resistant to downy mildew and botrytis (grey mould), two of the worst vine diseases. It is slightly susceptible to powdery mildew and excoriose, but its overall good disease resistance is a definite advantage for amateur cultivation. It is a good idea to do summer green pruning to remove certain leaves so that the grapes are well exposed to the sun and can develop that beautiful yellow colour, which is a guarantee of their taste quality.
This vine is very hardy (down to -20°C, or even -25°C) and grows in full sun, in neutral to slightly acidic, well-drained soil. It will thrive in ordinary, even rocky soil, as long as it is not too dry.

Fanny grapes can be consumed as table grapes or used for juice, as their flesh is very juicy. For example, they can be used in a vitamin-packed fruit cocktail for breakfast. In general, grapes are rich in B vitamins, a source of fibre and manganese, and they are also rich in antioxidants. They are believed to play a role in preventing cardiovascular diseases, and most importantly, they are a healthy, natural, and delicious dessert. To create original fruit salads, plant a Kiwi, such as the Actinidia deliciosa Kiwi Wonder, a variety with very sweet and non-acidic fruits (female variety, so pair it with a male variety for pollination). For diversification, try Diospyros virginiana SAA Pieper, an early-fruiting American persimmon tree that will give you fruits at the same time as Fanny.

Vitis vinifera Fanny - Grape Vine in pictures

Vitis vinifera Fanny - Grape Vine (Harvest) Harvest

Plant habit

Height at maturity 3 m
Spread at maturity 3 m
Growth rate normal

Fruit

Fruit colour yellow
Flavour Sour
Use Table
Harvest time September to October

Flowering

Flower colour green
Flowering time June to July
Inflorescence Cluster

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour medium green

Botanical data

Genus

Vitis

Species

vinifera

Cultivar

FANNY COV

Family

Vitaceae

Other common names

Common Grape Vine, European Grape, Wine Grape

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

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Planting and care

Since the devastation caused by phylloxera at the end of the 19th century, grapevines are grafted onto different rootstocks resistant to this disease and adapted to different types of soil. These rootstocks come from American varieties naturally armed against this formidable parasite, which itself originates from America.
Plant the Fanny grapevine in autumn, in a deep, well-drained soil, even stony, clayey, and chalky. The vine is not very demanding in terms of the chemical nature of the soil, it can adapt to moderately acidic soil (up to pH 6, because below that there are assimilation blockages of certain trace elements), neutral, and chalky up to pH 8.5 (it is the excess of active limestone that is harmful).

Plant it in a sunny location, sheltered from strong, cold, and dry winds. This variety withstands winter frosts, it is hardy to -20°/-25 °C. Incorporate 3 or 4 handfuls of fruit tree fertiliser and 2 kg of composted manure per vine into the planting soil. Be careful, the roots should not come into contact with the manure. After planting, prune above 2 large buds to obtain the growth of two branches. Keep the most vigorous one and tie it to a stake. Formation pruning will follow.

Grapevines do not require regular fertiliser application, quite the opposite for optimal yield. In overly rich soil, vegetative growth (leaves) will develop at the expense of fruiting. Enrich the soil with potash slag, crushed horn, or iron chelate, only every 2-3 years.
This variety is highly resistant to common grapevine diseases, including mildew and grey rot.

Planting period

Best planting time October to November
Recommended planting time February to April, September to November

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow
Type of use Climbing
Hardiness Hardy down to -23°C (USDA zone 6a) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 1 per m2
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Neutral, Calcareous
Soil type Chalky (poor, alkaline and well-drained), Clayey-chalky (heavy and alkaline), Silty-loamy (rich and light), ordinary, well-drained

Care

Pruning instructions This moderately vigorous and semi-erect variety can be trained on a trellis. For training pruning: the vertical cordon is the simplest, to cover a building or high wall. Maintain a vertical main stem onto which spaced secondary branches can be grown every 20 cm. Extend the cordon by 50 to 60 cm each year. To obtain a bilateral cordon (with two arms), select two opposite buds and train them individually as cordons. Fruit-bearing pruning: the vine blooms on the current year's shoots, carried by the previous year's branches. To ensure abundant fruiting, it is necessary to renew the canes every year. Pruning in green is recommended in June-July, in the form of bud thinning. This involves slightly thinning out the plant to allow the sun to fully ripen the future berries.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time March, June to July
Soil moisture Tolerant
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground

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