VA_LongBean
Deeply Rooted
So I can't post photos from Facebook here huh? Okay.
@so lucky The winds have flattened my tomatoes twice, and I've just stood their cages back up. They are so spindly and with big fruits that look like ornaments on a Charlie Brown Christmas tree! I missed the window to plant squash and melons because it was just too mucky to work the field. Drought, tornado, flood --so far just another sorry year for the garden I'm afraid! Hoping if the sun ever shines again the beans will perk up. I still have five months of growing time ahead.
Wow that is a lot of water alright! I hope your beans dry out enough to make them happy.@Hal, I have a few short rows in the field that are doing well. However, I'd also planted some as an experiment down in the creek like the Puebloans do, and they washed away in the flood. I will replant them once I know we are out of flood danger. The soil is so saturated here any amount of rainfall will cause another flood. I read that enough rain has fallen to cover the entire state of Texas (which is huge) with 8 inches of water!
I also received from another member of Seed Savers Exchange in late April. The remains of the beans that Robert Lobitz was working with before he passed away in 2006. The beans had been in the hands of an SSE member in Kansas and he has gotten rather frustrated working with them so I got a hold of them from him and I will give them a try.
I'll plant 18 different ones out of those. I also split these Lobitz beans with a young fellow in Kentucky who wants to be a bean breeder. I met him one morning in early February when I got an email from him after he discovered my website. He is a high school student. His parents were plant breeders for the Cargill company from the early 1970's to the mid 1990's. So by the end of this season I hope I can say it's bean and interesting summer.