Severny (grape)

Severny is a red grape variety. There is a new breed between interspecific Vitis amurensis and Seianetze Malengra. The crossing of the hybrid vine was in 1936 at the Viticulture Research Institute Magarach in Rostov -on-Don in Russia by Ya. I. Potapenko and E. Zakharova. It is grown on the east coast of the U.S., for example, in the Finger Lakes region of upstate New York, in Russia and Canada.

See also: Viticulture in Canada, viticulture in the United States, List of grape varieties.

Synonyms: Severnii, Severnyi

Ethnicity: Seianetze x Vitis amurensis Malengra: In grade Seianetze Malengra is an open abgeblühte (open pollinated ) intersection with the variety Previously Malingre. The father places is thus unknown.

Descendants

The very frost resistant by the influence of coming from the Amur Valley on the Russian- Chinese border, wild grape Vitis amurensis variety was crossing partner in some new breeds such as the sort saperavi Severnyi. In the Czech Republic it was believed erroneously that the Rebzüchter V. Kraus served this variety in Lednice as the basis of further new varieties. In Germany, however, did not flow into the breeding Bronner, Baron, Cabernet Carbon, Prior and Solaris, (refer to the explanation in the article saperavi Severnyi ). Nevertheless Severny is a key component in the discovery of new varieties for a cool climate viticulture dar.

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