Hardiness observations and records
in other languages than French
Morus nigra
Morus
nigra is less hardy than Morus alba. For the people who live in the borderline
for Morus nigra to survive, I give evidence that some Morus nigra varieties are
extra hardy. If you select these varieties, it is possible to grow Morus nigra
under wheather conditions that, in general, this species doesn't
withstand.
I live in Austria, 80 km east of Salzburg, 420 m above sea level.
Average annual temperature 6...8°C, precipitation 1800 mm. Winters may bring
-18°C during 2 or 3 weeks. I bought a Morus nigra 'Bigfruited' from the
Netherlands 20 years ago. It died a year later. In 1988 I got two ordinary
Morus nigra (each 80 cm tall) from the Hungarian wine region (20 km south of
Bratislava, Slovakia). They started fruiting 2 years later, and they fruit every
year (3 kg at least drop to the ground).
Morus nigra
Morus nigra är mindre köldhärdigt än Morus alba. För dem som bor i
områden där Morus nigra är på gränsen till härdigt, kan jag tala om att det
finns varieteter av Morus nigra som är extra härdiga. Om man odlar dessa
varieteter är det möjligt att odla Morus nigra under förhållanden som denna art
normalt inte klarar. Jag bor i Österrike, 80 km öster om Salzburg, 420 meter
över havet. Den årliga medeltempreaturen är 6-8C och den årliga nederbörden är
1800 mm. Under vintern kan temperaturen sjunka till -18C under 2-3
veckor. Jag köpte ett Morus nigra "Bigfruited" från Holland för 20 år sedan.
Det dog ett år senare. 1988 fick jag tag på två Morus nigra (vardera 80 cm
höga), vid den ungerska vinregionen (20 km öder om Bratislava, Slovakien). De
började sätta frukt efter 2 år och har därefter satt frukt varje år (minst 3 kg
som faller ner till marken).
Crataegus azarolus 'White Italian'
I live in
Gothenburg, Sweden. Two years ago, I grafted a plant of the yellow fruited Crataegus azarolus 'White Italian', well known by the members of our brotherhood. I planted it out last year in a place
which is protected from cold northern and eastern winds. It was about one meter high. At the same time as 'White Italian' I had grafted a second plant of Crataegus azarolus species (an unnamed cultivar which produces big red fruits, selected by a French Mediterranean nursery). This other azarole plant, also one meter high, was planted
about ten meters away, in a wind protected site. I would say that there were
almost the same conditions for both the plants. This winter was unusually cold and the cold also stayed for over two and a
half month. The snow cover was also heavy, up to 75 cm. We had a lot of nights
with temperatures under –15C and for one night it reached –19C. Quite a lot of
plants died for me this winter, for example Vitis, Cudrania, Broussonetia, Ficus
etc. These conditions were perfectly whistood by the 'White Italian' cultivar, which was very healthy after this awful winter, even for the part above the snow cover which is a factor reducing the frost effect. In January I discovered serious damages on the other azarole cultivar, and
in March I noticed that it was dead. This may indicate that 'White Italian' could be hardier than other Crataegus azarolus cultivars. It will be interesting to observe the future behavior of 'White Italian' for a long period to determine its real hardiness... Description (French language) with photos of this valuable cultivar.
Your possible contributions
This page is used by the members of our brotherhood who do not speak French, but it is not strictly reserved for them. Visitors of our web site from all around the world, if you are enthusiast about rare fruit growing, we invite you to send us (Contacts), using your native language or English as you wish, hardiness observations that you consider of high interest. We will publish them inside the present page. The observations may concern the death or the survival (with various levels of damage) of a plant. Be rigourous and do not forget the following details when reporting your hardiness observation :
... General informations about your location and your climate and soil conditions.
... Age of the plant.
... Height of the plant.
... Negative temperature which killed the plant or was whistood by it.
... General wheather conditions relative to the
period including your observation (number
of days with negative temperatures, snow or rain, wind etc.).
... Existence or not of possible factors having
contributed to reduce the frost effect (plant entirely covered with snow,
protection against the main winds by trees, bushes, wall, house... location on a
well exposed slope with drained soil... mineral blocks spreading during the
night the diurnal accumulated heat etc.).