The "grapevine" is any informal channel of information. It has spawned such derivative terms as the "jungle telegraph" (Africa, Asia) and "bush telegraph" (Australia). Although sometimes used to mean a rumor mill or gossip. it can include truthful information that is obtained from an indirect source.
The origin of the term is unclear, but it may indicate the spreading nature of actual grapevines, where it is difficult to follow the twisting path of the vine back to its source. It could also indicate the secretive aspect of the information, as it would be obtained from anonymous contacts among workers in the vineyards.
A Vineyard
There isn't a word for a group of grapevines... sorry. But I think you should just call it a bunch of grapevines... because you call them a bunch of grapes, right? So why shouldn't grapevine be the same?
When the Grapevines Bloom on the Danube was created in 1965.
There is no specific collective noun for grapevines, in which case, a noun suitable for the context of the sentence is used, for example a tangle of grapevines, a cloak of grapevines, etc.
Grapes...
Yes, applying vinegar directly to grapevines can harm or kill them because vinegar is a strong acid that can damage the plant's tissues and roots. It is not recommended to use vinegar as a herbicide on grapevines.
Cyprus
In a vineyard or somebody's garden.
Land of vines (grapevines).
Vin(pronounced like tin) means pasture. He saw wide open fields :)
wild grapevines and sinew
A vineyard (vines of grapes)