workshop - rescue of old fruit varieties of the Kokořín region since 2000

graft removal and localization of old varieties 2015

The atelier together with the Ornamental Association for Mšeno and its surroundings decided to save the original cherry varieties in the Mšeno and Kokořín regions. It tries to locate, multiply and return varieties to the cultural landscape.

It also tries to promote them, highlight them and thus increase their popularity. We found out from the local natives what and where was grown here. They then found and marked local varieties in the field. Mšeno, like the cherry region, had several local varieties of cherries, which were almost forgotten.

So far, the varieties Mšenská Jánovka and Perla z Bezdězu have been found and identified, and in the summer of 2014 the other two lost varieties Mšenská Žlutka and the Hradská cherry.

collaboration with:

CHKO Kokořínsko

Ornamental association for Mšeno and surroundings

Mšenské svatojánské třešňování

identification of old varieties and their location

exhibition of fruits and documents on the topic of cherries in the Mšeno region

2014

identification of cherry varieties in the field with experts:

Ing. Zdenka Koberová PLA Železné hory, specialist in determining stone fruit varieties

Ing. Martin Lípa, ecocentre meluzina

Ing. DiS. Slávek Valda, CHKO Kokořínsko

found old varieties of Mšeno:

Mšenská Jánovka, Perla Bezdězu, Mšenská Žlutka

Karešova, Kaštanka,Troprichterova, Chrupka Napoleonova - Lauermannova, Hedelfingerská, Thurn Taxis, Annonayská, Donissenova, Lyonská, Ramon Oliva, Vlasačka, Uherka, Hedelfingerká

Rescue of old varieties of fruit trees

activities for the purpose of saving old and proven fruit varieties of the Kokořín region since 2007

registration and recognition of the varieties Mšenská Jánovka and Perla z Bezdězu, 2013

graft removal and localization of old varieties, 2014

in the spring of 2013, the varieties of regional cherries Mšenská Jánovka and Perla Bezdězu were finally registered

now over twenty trees of the Mšenská Jánovka cherry have already been successfully grafted, which will start to be planted in the landscape around Mšeno in the autumn

search the mapping of existing trees

removing screws

cultivation in specialized fruit nurseries

Did you mean: odrůdy třešní: Mšenská Jánovka, Perla z Bezdězu, ...

odrůdy jabloní: Grávštýnské červené, Starkinson, ...

cooperation:

Bojkovice Fruit Nursery - Radim Pešek (old varieties)

CHKO Kokořínsko

Ornamental association for Mšeno and surroundings

Jánovka Mšenská

rescue of the old regional variety of cherries since 2007

in cooperation with  Ornamental association for Mšeno and surroundings, o.s.

Trevisan atelier + together with the Ornamental Association for Mšeno and surroundings, o.s. together with the joint efforts they try to return to the landscape of Mšeno the formerly widely cultivated regional variety Jánovka Mšenská.

Jánovka (dark heartworm) has a very varied history in the Mšeno region, where it grew up as a random seedling near the church of St. Jana and hence its name "Jánovka". At present, however, it has been declining and even endangering its occurrence in its original homeland.

"Jánovka will grow, ... In a few years Mšeno, again as in earlier times, will be surrounded by milirdies of white cherry blossoms. At least I wish it ..." Jiří Říha (Ornamental Association for Mšeno and surroundings, o.s.)

"In the vicinity of Mšeno, cultivated" Janovka ", to which all attention should be paid, received the name from the church of St. Jan, near which the original tree grew. In the seventeenth century, a cherry tree grew from a scattered stone, the fruit of which was remarkably distinguished by its extraordinary size and sweetness, and attracted the attention of all the inhabitants.  It was strange how a wild tree could bear such excellent fruit, and a test was made by grafting on another tree growing at the same church, which also did well; cherries from these trees were very rare and largely sent only to special persons as a gift. When the cherries excelled, many of the trees began to be planted. Everyone asked only for them and only wanted to get grafts from these. ”Říha, J. (1937): Czech fruits - cherries, sour cherries and plums, Part II Unie, Prague.