meadow
Deeply Rooted
How long are those pods on MN-150?
I will ask Paul the right way to pronounce Berea. I'll take a stab at it right now. My guess would be that it's pronounced Brea ! Did I get it close?ask Paul D the right way to pronounce Berea lol
They vary some. Maybe 8-10 inches on average? Some of them have ~15 seeds in them which is pretty nice!How long are those pods on MN-150?
Thank you, Russ! Janice is currently on vacation so I'll drop her a line next week.You may certainly give Janice my email address. I will be very interested in having a conversation about Kentucky beans with her. A million Kudos to you for such great dective work.
Hello @Greasy and a great big Kentucky Heirloom bean welcome to you. I wonder if the Bill Best and family in Barea would know anything about these Sallee Dunahoo beans and were the family lived in Kentucky.
"- the Marshall person you referred to, to my memory was just a Facebook friend for a short while. I remember him having gardens and asking if I could send him some seeds from the Appalachian area, as I was leaving on a trip at that time to go see family. If memory serves me I sent him a few of my family’s heirloom greasy bean seeds, then stopped at an Amish village in that area and bought several different varieties from them, which were all labeled. I believe he grew gardens from those I sent, but I do not know if he kept them separate or anything more beyond that. For some reason I think he was affiliated with the Baker Creek Seed Company, but I am not sure of that. I lost contact with him many years ago -"
Wow, what a haul! (eta: thank you for measuring!!!)They vary some. Maybe 8-10 inches on average? Some of them have ~15 seeds in them which is pretty nice!
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Cow- 70 days- 9 inch pods that have 20 or more black seeds per pod on extremely productive plants that produce multiple crops. The most productive cowpea I have ever grown. This was in Tom’s collection with no documentation other than the word Cow written on the packet
In my research through SSE Yearbooks, the description of "Cow" most closely matches my observations of the black-seeded cowpea. But given that @Bluejay77 does not have source info, it is impossible to trace the seeds provenance further back. I hesitate to give it a new name, but am equally hesitant to just call it "Cow" & risk contaminating the original if the two are not in fact identical. I wish this could be resolved, because IMO this is a spectacular cowpea that I would like to share widely.Awhile back there was some discussion about an unnamed black cowpea that @Zeedman had grown out. He'd gotten them from @Bluejay77. Have they ever been named?
Have you seen this one on the Sandhill site? (I'm not suggesting that it might be the same cowpea.. just that it has a short DTM and is "extremely productive"):
I vote we dub it 'Wicked Awesome Mini Moo' (WAMM for short).In my research through SSE Yearbooks, the description of "Cow" most closely matches my observations of the black-seeded cowpea. But given that @Bluejay77 does not have source info, it is impossible to trace the seeds provenance further back. I hesitate to give it a new name, but am equally hesitant to just call it "Cow" & risk contaminating the original if the two are not in fact identical. I wish this could be resolved, because IMO this is a spectacular cowpea that I would like to share widely.