Ridgerunner
Garden Master
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2009
- Messages
- 8,229
- Reaction score
- 10,064
- Points
- 397
- Location
- Southeast Louisiana Zone 9A
Welcome to the forum @Lady0bug! Glad you found us!
Hope you stick around and join us in the general discussions. We're a fairly small group as forums go but a pretty friendly bunch and always glad to meet new people. Russ always starts a new bean grow-out thread in the spring. Sure hope you join us there if nowhere else. But we'd really like to get to know you better.
If you go to Russ's website and scroll through the beans you can see a lot with that general pattern but I did not see any colored like that.
http://www.abeancollectorswindow.com/index.html
I don't know if you've grown bean outcrosses like that before, this was my first year. I learned a couple of lessons. You never know for sure if the bean will be a pole or bush when you plant it. I had bush grow as pole and pole grow as bush, though a few did behave.
Each bean plant will produce seeds that look like all the other beans on that plant, but each seed can produce totally different seeds for the other seeds. If you look at Russ's bean show from yesterday, Day 55, you can see all the different looks he got from his Rabbit's Foot segregation. If you plant all nine of the beans in your photo you can easily come up with as many as nine different seeds. Sometimes the differences are kind of subtle, sometimes they knock your socks off. That means you need to plant each seed so you can tell which plant those seeds came from. I didn't always do that and had some sorting nightmares.
Annette had at least one of Russ's outcrosses produce a bean that looked like what she planted, lucky girl. I planted 4 different sets of beans from Russ and got 24 different beans, none of which looked like the bean I planted. To me it was a real thrill when I got the first dried beans from a plant to see what they looked like.
Once again, .
Hope you stick around and join us in the general discussions. We're a fairly small group as forums go but a pretty friendly bunch and always glad to meet new people. Russ always starts a new bean grow-out thread in the spring. Sure hope you join us there if nowhere else. But we'd really like to get to know you better.
If you go to Russ's website and scroll through the beans you can see a lot with that general pattern but I did not see any colored like that.
http://www.abeancollectorswindow.com/index.html
I don't know if you've grown bean outcrosses like that before, this was my first year. I learned a couple of lessons. You never know for sure if the bean will be a pole or bush when you plant it. I had bush grow as pole and pole grow as bush, though a few did behave.
Each bean plant will produce seeds that look like all the other beans on that plant, but each seed can produce totally different seeds for the other seeds. If you look at Russ's bean show from yesterday, Day 55, you can see all the different looks he got from his Rabbit's Foot segregation. If you plant all nine of the beans in your photo you can easily come up with as many as nine different seeds. Sometimes the differences are kind of subtle, sometimes they knock your socks off. That means you need to plant each seed so you can tell which plant those seeds came from. I didn't always do that and had some sorting nightmares.
Annette had at least one of Russ's outcrosses produce a bean that looked like what she planted, lucky girl. I planted 4 different sets of beans from Russ and got 24 different beans, none of which looked like the bean I planted. To me it was a real thrill when I got the first dried beans from a plant to see what they looked like.
Once again, .