Original Thompson's Seedless Grape

thistlebloom

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Joz, congratulations on the progress you made sleuthing out the current owner of your grandpas grapes. I think it's so neat that you will be able to start some and keep the line going.
 

bobm

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The Thomson's seedless grapes grow in S. San Juaquin valley in vineyards as far as the eye can see. :throw A friend has 800 acres of them. ... nice light yellow grapes and very sweet :drool ... they are the raisins that one buys all over the country as well as other countries ... " Sun Maid " brand raisins :coolsun
 

joz

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Well, the owner says the vines are thriving, and the pic from a couple years ago sure looks good, so I'm guessing that if I screw up the first batch of cuttings, I can probably get more.

I can't imagine this is the ONLY VINE LEFT EVER, particularly if Bob's friend has 800 acres in. :) But they're sure not readily available.

Are there objective tests to determine what variety these actually are? Or is it a subjective "looks like, tastes similar, must be"?

My grandmother used to take them off the bunches and freeze them in ziplock bags. During the summer she'd give me a little dish of grapecicles. :)

Edit: Apparently there's one proper grape that thrives in South Louisiana:

http://www.wafb.com/Global/story.asp?S=14014518&clienttype=printable

I don't know if it matters that it's on the North side of Lake Pontchartrain and I'm on the South, but...

Would this be the rootstock I'd be looking for?
 
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