Grape
Vitis vinifera / Vitis labrusca
Also known as: Wine grape, Table grape, Concord grape, Vitis, Uva, Raisin
Quick facts
- Category
- fruiting
- Difficulty
- intermediate
- Days to harvest
- 730 to 1460 days
- Harvest type
- continuous production over weeks or months
- Spacing
- 240 cm between plants
Environment
- Temperature
- -20–35°C
- pH
- 5.5 to 7
- EC (hydroponic)
- 1.2 to 2 mS/cm
- Daily light
- 24 to 38 mol/m²/day
Climate and zones
- USDA zones
- 4 to 10 (winter low around -34°C or warmer)
- Frost tolerance
- very hardy (survives deep cold)
- Season
- warm (summer crops, frost-sensitive)
Viable growing environments:
- outdoor year-round (in zone)
- unheated greenhouse / hoop house
USDA zone bounds reflect outdoor year-round survival. Anywhere outside the bounded zone range, this crop still grows as an annual in the warm months (outdoor_seasonal), under cover (greenhouse), or indoors under lights.
Growing systems
Grape works in:
- soil bed
Root mass is very heavy - thin-channel systems (NFT, vertical towers) can't hold this crop mechanically, hence the system list above.
Growing media
The substrate the roots sit in. Choice depends on the system (clay pebbles don't fit NFT channels; rockwool isn't used in media beds) and the crop (grape works in the media listed below).
| Medium | pH effect | Water retention | Bacterial surface |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soil-based mix (Potting soil) | varies by source | high | high |
Bacterial surface area matters for aquaponics: clay pebbles, lava rock, and pumice double as biofilter substrate. Low-surface media (rockwool, perlite, pea gravel) work in hydroponics but need a separate biofilter in aquaponics.
Nutrient demand by stage
NPK ratios are relative weights at each growth stage; the nutrient mix calculator scales them to absolute grams or ml. EC targets shift through the plant's life: seedlings need a much lighter solution than fruiting adults.
| Stage | N | P | K | EC target (mS/cm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| seedling | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0.8 |
| vegetative | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1.5 |
| flowering | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1.7 |
| fruiting | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1.6 |
Companion-growing notes
- High transpiration. Reservoir level will need regular top-ups during fruiting or flowering.
Aquaponics suitability
Not recommended for pure aquaponics. Fish waste alone doesn't provide enough of the nutrients this crop demands (typically potassium, calcium, or boron). It can be grown in a hybrid system where the reservoir is supplemented with hydroponic-style nutrients, but expect to dose actively.
Care notes
A vine crop requiring significant structure but feasible for outdoor aquaponics integration. Large container (40 L) or in-ground with trellis support (the vine needs 2–3 m of horizontal or vertical trellis). EC 1.5-2.5 mS/cm. pH 6.0-7.0. Temperature: most V. vinifera varieties need hot, dry summers (25–35°C) and winter chill (700-1500 hours below 7°C). American and hybrid varieties are more cold-hardy and disease-resistant. Full sun (DLI 20-30 mol/m2/day). Pruning is essential: grapes fruit on one-year-old wood, so the vine must be pruned back severely each winter to produce new fruiting canes. Without annual pruning, the vine becomes an unproductive tangle. Fruiting begins in the 2nd or 3rd year. Each mature vine produces 5–15 kg of fruit depending on variety and training system. Powdery mildew and downy mildew are the most common diseases; resistant varieties and airflow management are the primary defenses. For aquaponics growers, a grapevine trained along a greenhouse structure or fence provides shade, fruit, and attractive foliage.
Notable varieties
A starting shortlist of cultivars worth knowing about. Not exhaustive: the seed catalogs list hundreds of named varieties. These are the ones home growers commonly choose between.
| Cultivar | Type | Days | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Concord | open-pollinated | 1095 | Vitis labrusca, 1849 Massachusetts seedling. THE American grape, basis for Welch's juice, the jelly grape. Slip-skin, dark purple, intensely foxy aroma. Zones 4-7, very hardy. Disease-tolerant, easy. The variety to start with if you've never grown grapes. |
| Thompson Seedless (Sultana) | open-pollinated | 1095 | Vitis vinifera, ancient Persian/Turkish origin. The world's most-grown table grape and the raisin grape. Seedless green, sweet, crisp. Zones 7-10, needs hot dry summer. Won't ripen north of zone 7. Susceptible to powdery mildew. |
| Cabernet Sauvignon | open-pollinated | 1460 | Vitis vinifera, 17th-century Bordeaux chance hybrid (Cabernet Franc × Sauvignon Blanc). Premier wine grape worldwide. Small dark blue fruit, thick skin, low yield, high quality. Zones 7-10. The grape commercial wineries plant most. |
| Marquette | hybrid | 1095 | University of Minnesota 2006 release, complex hybrid with Pinot Noir ancestry. Cold-hardy to -35C, hardy zones 3-7. The grape that lets Minnesota and Wisconsin grow serious red wine. Small dark blue fruit, medium body, food-friendly wine. |
| Niagara | open-pollinated | 1095 | Vitis labrusca × vinifera hybrid, 1872 New York. The white American slip-skin counterpart to Concord. Sweet, foxy, makes the cheap sweet white wine and the supermarket white grape juice. Zones 4-7. |
| Flame Seedless | hybrid | 1095 | USDA 1973 release, vinifera complex hybrid. Crisp seedless red table grape, the supermarket red. Zones 7-10. Heat-loving, dry-summer climates. Earlier ripening than Thompson, useful for shoulder-season production. |
Verified against: rhs-uk, u-of-california-extension, cornell-cea, wsu-extension. Last reviewed 2026-05-15.