Stressbaby
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- Aug 19, 2012
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I have what I believe to be crown gall. The vines are 3 years old.
I inexplicably lost ~12 of my 40 Nortons over the winter and early spring-time period - they didn't leaf out or they barely pushed some leaves then just wilted and died. Of the vines that are left, several this year looked very weak, with little growth and really poor color. I did not let any of these weaker vines carry any grapes. Norton was sourced from AA with a few from another source I found in Arkansas. I say that because I was told once by a reputable winery that they had gotten infected material from AA.
There has been no mower or trimmer damage. I'm sure that in the past I have rubbed off trunk shoots with insufficient attention to sanitation. That has been corrected. The thing that makes me wonder if my plants were already infected is that 1) these aren't galls in the way you usually think of galls (like a knotty growth) - they appear to be abnormal circumferentially over the lower 18-24" of the trunks, and 2) at this point, largely Norton and Chambourcin are affected. All pics below are those 2 varieties except for the last pic which is the one obvious Vidal infection.
Mostly that is water under the bridge. I'm really looking for advice on management. Gallex appears to be hard to find online.
@Dennis Griffith
I inexplicably lost ~12 of my 40 Nortons over the winter and early spring-time period - they didn't leaf out or they barely pushed some leaves then just wilted and died. Of the vines that are left, several this year looked very weak, with little growth and really poor color. I did not let any of these weaker vines carry any grapes. Norton was sourced from AA with a few from another source I found in Arkansas. I say that because I was told once by a reputable winery that they had gotten infected material from AA.
There has been no mower or trimmer damage. I'm sure that in the past I have rubbed off trunk shoots with insufficient attention to sanitation. That has been corrected. The thing that makes me wonder if my plants were already infected is that 1) these aren't galls in the way you usually think of galls (like a knotty growth) - they appear to be abnormal circumferentially over the lower 18-24" of the trunks, and 2) at this point, largely Norton and Chambourcin are affected. All pics below are those 2 varieties except for the last pic which is the one obvious Vidal infection.
Mostly that is water under the bridge. I'm really looking for advice on management. Gallex appears to be hard to find online.
@Dennis Griffith