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Blue-Jay
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@Decoy1,
I'm sure there are varieties circulating around with more than one name. Sometimes people forget a beans name and grow it for years and pass it on to someone else and have lost track of the name. The new grower renames the bean. Sometimes spelling errors give beans more than one name. I know of a case in the Seed Savers Exchange yearbook were one of the listers of a bean acquired the same bean as I did from the same source. The source had the bean "Holy" listed under the Category of climbing beans. I listed the bean by it's name "Holy". This other lister typed their entry as "Holy Climbing". So there is a case that I know of, that a bean now has two names. Both entries now do appear in the Seed Savers Exchange yearbook one right after the other. "Holy" and "Holy Climbing".
Also without beans having more than one name. Colors, seed shapes and patterns are repeatable in beans which probably makes a grower wonder somtimes if two beans that look so similar. Might be the same variety. You could take note of the pod shape among beans that seem so similar. Or other characteristics as blossom or pod color, and maturity time. Height of growth or leaf size and texture. Somethings that could make two seemingly similar beans really different.
However there are beans circulating with more than one name.
Speaking of beans with two names. I saw the bean Edogava Zuranacki Namame on a Facebook bean group I belong too. Looked like the exact same seed. The fellow that loaded the beans photo called it. La Tigre Rouge or Red Tiger. He told me the name I have is Japanese. EZN is how I acquired the bean. Do I leave it that way? I kind of like the sound of the French name. Could it just really be two look-a-like beans. Makes one wonder sometimes.
I'm sure there are varieties circulating around with more than one name. Sometimes people forget a beans name and grow it for years and pass it on to someone else and have lost track of the name. The new grower renames the bean. Sometimes spelling errors give beans more than one name. I know of a case in the Seed Savers Exchange yearbook were one of the listers of a bean acquired the same bean as I did from the same source. The source had the bean "Holy" listed under the Category of climbing beans. I listed the bean by it's name "Holy". This other lister typed their entry as "Holy Climbing". So there is a case that I know of, that a bean now has two names. Both entries now do appear in the Seed Savers Exchange yearbook one right after the other. "Holy" and "Holy Climbing".
Also without beans having more than one name. Colors, seed shapes and patterns are repeatable in beans which probably makes a grower wonder somtimes if two beans that look so similar. Might be the same variety. You could take note of the pod shape among beans that seem so similar. Or other characteristics as blossom or pod color, and maturity time. Height of growth or leaf size and texture. Somethings that could make two seemingly similar beans really different.
However there are beans circulating with more than one name.
Speaking of beans with two names. I saw the bean Edogava Zuranacki Namame on a Facebook bean group I belong too. Looked like the exact same seed. The fellow that loaded the beans photo called it. La Tigre Rouge or Red Tiger. He told me the name I have is Japanese. EZN is how I acquired the bean. Do I leave it that way? I kind of like the sound of the French name. Could it just really be two look-a-like beans. Makes one wonder sometimes.
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