Herb latin name: Vitis parvifolia


Synonyms: Vitis flexuosa parvifolia


Family: Vitaceae (Grape Family)



Medicinal use of Vitis parvifolia:

The watery sap from the stems is dripped into the eyes to relieve inflammation.

Description of the plant:



Plant:
Deciduous
Climber

Flowering:
June
to July

Habitat of the herb:

Found at altitudes between 900 to 1800 metres in Jaunsar and Tehri Gerwhal in the Himalayas.

Edible parts of Vitis parvifolia:

Fruit - raw or dried for winter use. The fruit is rather small, about 7mm in diameter, but is carried in bunches which makes it easier to harvest. Young leaves are wrapped around other foods and then baked, they impart a pleasant flavour. Young tendrils - raw or cooked. Sap - used as a drink. Best harvested in the spring and early summer, the plant yields abundantly. Do not harvest too much, though, or you will weaken the plant.

Other uses of the herb:

A yellow dye is obtained from the fresh or dried leaves.

Propagation of Vitis parvifolia:

Seed - best sown in a cold frame as soon as it is ripe. Six weeks cold stratification improves the germination rate, and so stored seed is best sown in a cold frame as soon as it is obtained. Germination should take place in the first spring, but sometimes takes another 12 months. Prick out the seedlings into individual pots when they are large enough to handle and grow them on in a cold frame for their first winter. Plant out in early summer. Cuttings of mature wood of the current seasons growth, December/January in a frame. These cuttings can be of wood 15 - 30cm long or they can be of short sections of the stem about 5cm long with just one bud at the top of the section. In this case a thin, narrow strip of the bark about 3cm long is removed from the bottom half of the side of the stem. This will encourage callusing and the formation of roots. Due to the size of these cuttings they need to be kept in a more protected environment than the longer cuttings. Layering.

Cultivation of the herb:

Found at altitudes between 900 to 1800 metres in Jaunsar and Tehri Gerwhal in the Himalayas.

Known hazards of Vitis parvifolia:

None known

Plant information taken from the Plants For A Future.