• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Any canadians growing hops

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

AlbertaBeer

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 1, 2023
Messages
71
Reaction score
64
Location
alberta
Just curious if anyone farther north has had and luck growing them. I haven’t really put any thought into it, but it would be cool to grow my own just to say I did!

We’re usually in the low 50s for chu, so we come up about 10-15 heat units shy of the southern prairies and likely anywhere else that actually grows hops. Another issue is likely winter kill, from the little bit I’ve read they don’t usually winter too well below -20c, so chances are -45 will kill them im thinking. Or can a guy just mulch heavy over them in the fall and save them?

It’s probably a lost cause trying to grow them here, but if there’s a chance it’ll work I’m game for trying it!
 
Lots of Canadians growing hops in the more southern regions, but not sure about up around your parts. You might get some growth but likely not as much as anywhere else. Fortunately rhizomes aren't overly expensive so I'd say go for it and see what happens. When it comes to mulch I'd definitely say go heavy in the fall and keep your fingers crossed for not TOO deep of a freeze.
 
Yea I’ve looked around and they definitely aren’t expensive. I just don’t want to go through the hassle of getting a spot prepped for them and a lattice to climb if they aren’t going to produce anything!

Probably would have been a good idea to have them in the ground 3 weeks ago too, but I haven’t even had the time to put the garden in yet 😂
 
Just curious if anyone farther north has had and luck growing them....It’s probably a lost cause trying to grow them here, but if there’s a chance it’ll work I’m game for trying it!
Well depending on where you are in Alberta, some of the classic hop-growing regions could be "further north" than you. Calgary is roughly the same latitude as Hythe and Salisbury so all English commercial hops are grown north of Calgary, ditto most Polish hops. And there's certainly people growing hops in Sweden, which would take you up to at least Fort McMurray latitude, probably further north.

Obviously the climate is a bit different, but at least you don't have to worry about day-length like some people. Remember - these are a temperate crop, they're adapted to pretty high latitudes. BB1, the hop that was the foundation of most modern hop genetics, came from Morden, Manitoba at about the same latitude as Vancouver.

I imagine the likes of Great Lakes Hops could give more advice but I'd say give it a go, but be generous in protecting the rhizome in winter.
 
grew them in Winnipeg for years and did absolutely nothing to protect them. Zero issue with winterkill. Issue I had was when it was time to get rid of them, they are harder to kill than grow. They develop a huge taproot that goes down several feet, and it you don't get it all, they will grow back.
 
Can't really compare Europe to Canada just by latitude to predict weather and growing conditions. Europe gets warmed by Atlantic currents, while we get chilled by Arctic ones.

Hop bines are renewed every year, you just need your rhizomes to survive. Provided they are in the ground, I'd presume most cultivars could survive, though I'm really not familiar with Northern Alberta. Snow's a fairly good insulator, though. Might be trickier to get decent yields though when you combine the short growing season and photoperiod of that latitude. Also "Northern Alberta" is a bit vague. Grimshaw height? Fitzgerald? There's a few hardiness zone differences between those.
 
Hey, I’ve been growing hops in Alberta capital region just outside Edmonton for about six years now and if I gave my bines the space they’d grow about 20 feet tall. I only let them go about 15, I have three varieties that I grow centennial, Cascade and EKG.

One thing I've noticed growing here in Canada is not the same as anywhere in the world. I've learned not to listen to others when it comes to growing and harvesting as it does not apply to up here our growing season is so short and different and the last six years I have noticed different growing seasons each year some years I get great Harvest and other years it's just garbage.
 
Hey, I’ve been growing hops in Alberta capital region just outside Edmonton for about six years now and if I gave my bines the space they’d grow about 20 feet tall. I only let them go about 15, I have three varieties that I grow centennial, Cascade and EKG.

One thing I've noticed growing here in Canada is not the same as anywhere in the world. I've learned not to listen to others when it comes to growing and harvesting as it does not apply to up here our growing season is so short and different and the last six years I have noticed different growing seasons each year some years I get great Harvest and other years it's just garbage.


Good to know!

I haven’t tried any yet, but I may set aside a place in the garden for them next year. It was on the plan for this spring but things just got so hectic at work I hardly even got any vegetables in the garden let alone doing extra curricular activities 😂

Where did you get your rhizomes at? Did you plant them in spring or fall?
 

Latest posts

Back
Top