It grows in ravines and near creeks. It grows up sycamore trees. The wild grape of Southern California can cover a massive area, but you can tame it and grow it in your yard too.

On December 28, 2015, I cut a few pieces from a vine in a canyon near me and stuck them in the ground. They rooted into vigorous but manageable plants that provide shade on the east-facing windows of my house.

(My post: “Grapevine on eave to shade house.”)

Sunrise view from the living room in October.

Each October we eat the grapes from these vines. The purple grapes are small and with large seeds, but the flavor has a fine tang. I often just chew them to get all the juice and then spit out the seeds and skins.

Vitis girdiana is the botanical name. Some call the plant “Desert grape.”

I read that the wild grape that grows farther north in California is considered a different species (Vitis californica), but when I’ve seen wild grapes up there I haven’t noticed any difference between them and the wild grapes in Southern California.

Wild grape in Northern California near the bank of the Sacramento River and under a Valley Oak.
Wild grape in Southern California, near the San Luis Rey River in Bonsall, climbing a Live Oak.

Here in the fall the wild grapes become noticeable as you drive or hike around since they begin to turn yellow and orange. 

By Christmas all of their leaves will drop and they will just be sticks winding around on the ground and over bushes and up tree trunks. In the spring they will bud back to life with lime green new leaves.

During late summer, I sometimes find yellow striped caterpillars eating my wild grapevine leaves. The caterpillars are called Western grapeleaf skeletonizers, and I think they’re beautiful.

Western grapeleaf skeletonizer caterpillars on my wild grapes, October 2023.

I don’t water my wild grapes. I did the first year they were in the ground, but I stopped after that. Their root systems are exploratory and have found water given to vegetables and fruit trees nearby, and even not so nearby.

Besides summer shade for a window, other uses I have seen for a wild grapevine include shade for an arbor.

You may be able to buy a vine from a nursery that sells native plants, but you could also take a hike in a canyon and keep an eye out for a wild grapevine. If you find one, return in winter when it’s dormant, take a cutting and root it. Then you’d know for sure what your wild grapevine will grow up to look like.

(My post: “Propagating grapes with cuttings.”)

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