Ridgerunner
Garden Master
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2009
- Messages
- 8,229
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- Location
- Southeast Louisiana Zone 9A
It had some new stems starting from lower leaves joints so I cut the top of it off and now it doesn't look too bad, a little bushy for a pole bean but starting to climb again. Will see how it turns out.
I had a rabbit nip the tip off of a semi-runner last year in Arkansas. It had a couple of side shoots below that nip that produced fairly well. I do think it hurt production quite a bit but it dod not seem to delay production. That was a Miss T which is normally a pole bean but it is still segregating. Hopefully I can plant some of those next season to see how they turn out.
I had a cutworm cut off a Raspberry Ripple last year, again right above a couple of side shoots. That cutworm and I had a nice round table luncheon conversation with my chickens. The chickens found that conversation stimulating. That was a pole bean. It took forever for those two side shoots to grow but finally they did, but not nearly as vigorously as they normally do. From where it was situated I think the late start caused it to be shaded a lot more than it liked. It finally produced but it was way later than it should have been. That was one of the first ones planted but I only got a few dried beans before frost forecast. I cut off the top and took it inside to finish drying before I harvested the last several.
I think the shade had a lot to do with that last one, but with both I got limited production. Still you just need a few seeds to renew that bean. Good luck with it.