Neen5MI
Attractive To Bees
I need some guidance from growers with experience harvesting greasy beans for fresh eating. I'm growing 2 varieties for the first time, Headricks Greasy Cutshort and Dean Family Greasy Cutshort. They are network beans, but so amazingly productive that I decided to pick and eat some. How does one decide when the beans are mature enough for cooking in the pod vs shelly stage vs too far gone and best left to dry completely? My green bean history is only with varieties that should be picked before the seed is noticeably enlarged.
Here's what I picked and cooked for dinner tonight (ready to serve any minute).
Deans Family. Greasy Cutshort has a very few pods close to dry and some show speckling of the pods. Is that consistent pattern at a particular stage of maturity, or is it a potential rouge vine?
Here's what I picked and cooked for dinner tonight (ready to serve any minute).
Deans Family. Greasy Cutshort has a very few pods close to dry and some show speckling of the pods. Is that consistent pattern at a particular stage of maturity, or is it a potential rouge vine?