Vitis baileyana

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Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture

Vitis baileyana, Munson. ’Possum Grape. Less vigorous climber than V. cordifolia, rather slender, with short internodes and very many short side shoots: lvs. frequently smaller, the larger ones shortly but distinctly 3-lobed (lobes mostly pointed and much spreading), bright green but not shining above, gray below and pubescent at maturity only on the veins, the point only rarely prolonged and often muticous, the teeth comparatively small and notch-like and not prominently acute, sinus more open; petioles shorter and often pubescent: floral organs very small, the stamens reflexed in the fertile fls.: pedicels short, making the bunch very compact: berries about the size of V. cordifolia, black and nearly or quite bloomless, late; seed small and notched on top. Mountain valleys, 800-3,000 ft. altitude, S. W. Va. and adjacent W. Va. and W. N. C., Tenn., and N. Ga.; also at common levels in the uplands of W. Cent. Ga.—The eastern counterpart of V. Berlandieri.


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