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Vitis vinifera Victoria - Grape vine

Vitis vinifera Vittoria
Grapevine, Common Grape Vine, European Grape, Wine Grape

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This vigorous and highly productive vine produces beautiful, rather large, flexible, conical, branching, more or less compact clusters. Its grapes are oblong, of irregular size, medium to large, with thick skin, slightly powdery, green to greenish-yellow in colour, even amber-yellow in the sun at full ripeness. Their flesh is crunchy and juicy, with a sweet and juicy flavour, with some pips. The early harvest begins in September. This variety is slightly sensitive to powdery mildew and grey rot.
Flavour
Sugary
Height at maturity
5 m
Spread at maturity
2 m
Exposure
Sun
Self-fertilising
Best planting time March, October to November
Recommended planting time January to April, September to December
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Flowering time May to June
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Harvest time September
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Description

The grapevine or Vitis vinifera Victoria is a white table grapevine resulting from the cross-breeding between the 'Cardinal' and the 'Dattier de Beyrouth'. This variety is useful for its vigour, productivity, and large, crunchy, juicy grapes with a sweet and mild flavour. It produces generous clusters that ripen as early as September.

The wine grapevine (Vitis vinifera) grew wild over 5000 years ago. Many hybrids have been created to vary colours, flavours, and uses. The 'Victoria' grapevine is a Romanian creation by Victoria Lepadatu and Gheorghe Condei from the Dragasani Horticultural Research Institute, dating back to 1964. It is cultivated in many countries (Romania, Italy, Austria, Greece, Bulgaria, etc.). 'Victoria' is listed in the official catalogue of commercially marketable table grapevine varieties in the European Union.

A vigorous climbing woody shrub, the Victoria grapevine easily reaches a height or spread of 4-5m if not pruned. Its final shape will depend on the pruning performed. It is a sun-loving, undemanding, hardy, and frugal plant that prefers soil that is both clayey and stony, with a tendency towards limestone, even if it is dry in summer. Its long stems cling to their support (trellis, espalier...) through large green, twining tendrils. Its foliage, with a serrated edge, is deep green in summer and turns yellow and brown in autumn. Flowering occurs in May, earlier or later depending on the year and region, with small nectar-rich greenish flowers gathered in pyramidal and cylindrical, 10-12cm long clusters. The clusters have a beautiful appearance, they are rather large, flexible, conical, highly branched, and more or less compact. Its grapes are oblong, irregular in size, medium to large, with thick, slightly powdery, green to yellowish-green skin, or even amber-yellow when fully ripe. Their flesh is crunchy and juicy, with a sweet and mild flavour, and a few pips. The clusters withstand transportation, cold storage, and handling well.

'Victoria' grapes are consumed at the table, as dessert, in tarts, or as fruit juice. You can also use this vine to decorate a pergola or carefully train it on sturdy wires against a sunny wall. In February-March, prune this vine to 2-3 buds. It is sensitive to wind but resistant to cold winters (-15°C) and summer heat. Its foliage is slightly susceptible to powdery mildew and grey rot.

 

Plant habit

Height at maturity 5 m
Spread at maturity 2 m
Growth rate normal

Fruit

Fruit colour yellow
Fruit diameter 2 cm
Flavour Sugary
Use Table, Patisserie
Harvest time September

Flowering

Flower colour green
Flowering time May to June
Inflorescence Cluster
Flower size 10 cm
Bee-friendly Attracts pollinators

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour green

Botanical data

Genus

Vitis

Species

vinifera

Cultivar

Vittoria

Family

Vitaceae

Other common names

Grapevine, Common Grape Vine, European Grape, Wine Grape

Botanical synonyms

Vitis vinifera Victoria, Afuz, Afus, Ali, Régina

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Planting and care

Since the ravages of phylloxera at the end of the 19th century, the vine is now 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, itself of American origin. Plant the Victoria vine in autumn, in a deep, well-drained, even stony, clayey and chalky soil, in a sunny exposure, sheltered from strong winds. Incorporate 3 or 4 handfuls of fertiliser for fruit trees and 2 kg of composted manure into the planting soil for each vine. The roots must not be in contact with the manure. After planting, prune above 2 large buds (buds) to obtain the growth of two branches. Keep the most vigorous one, and tie it to a stake. The training pruning will follow. The Victoria vine adapts to many regions, it is hardy and fairly drought-tolerant. It is somewhat sensitive to fungal diseases and will require regular treatments, especially in rainy regions.

The vine does not require regular fertiliser input, for good yield, on the contrary. Enrich the soil with potash, crushed horn or iron chelate, only every 2-3 years.

Planting period

Best planting time March, October to November
Recommended planting time January to April, September to December

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow
Type of use Climbing, Orchard
Hardiness Hardy down to -15°C (USDA zone 7b) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 1 per m2
Planting spacing Every 150 cm
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Neutral, Calcareous
Soil type Chalky (poor, alkaline and well-drained), Silty-loamy (rich and light), Stony (poor and well-drained), well-draining, porous

Care

Pruning instructions Pruning: the vertical cord is the simplest, to cover a building or a high wall. Keep a vertical main stem on which spaced secondary branches will be grown every 20 cm. Extend the cord by a height of 50 to 60 cm each year. To obtain a bilateral cord (with two arms), select two opposite buds that will be individually trained into a cord. Fruiting pruning: the vine flowers on the shoots of the year, carried by the branches of the previous year. For abundant fruiting, the stems need to be renewed every year. The Victoria branches should be pruned above 2 or 3 dormant buds in February-March. Green pruning is recommended in May-June, in the form of bud removal.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time February to March, May to June
Soil moisture Tolerant
Disease resistance Poor
Overwinter Can be left in the ground

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