2024 Little Easy Bean Network - Growing Heirloom Beans Of Today And Tomorrow

heirloomgal

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Yes, very, and slugs abound. So much got demolished by them overnight and any replacements were a struggle to keep alive. Overall a major failure. I've never seen so many slugs in my life... dozens per sq metre. 🤢
I'm sorry to hear that @Trifiid, how dreadful. I've had slug problems in certain garden areas, notably against forest where they hide during daytime and emerge at night to slink up the sides of pots and containers. Around my water barrel too they can be numerous at night. They seem to become very active in wet cool conditions, and even where atmospheric moisture is higher.

Using copper coil antennae has helped me a lot with slugs and I see far fewer now in the problem areas and none in the garden, or the lettuce anymore. I read that slugs & snails are quite a different garden pest than most because they use hemocyanin (a copper protein) instead of haemoglobin (an iron protein) for cellular oxygen transport. This seems to be the single powerful exploit humans have against these tenacious critters - a natural proclivity to avoid copper due to their natural chemical abundance of it. There is the reverse too, the proclivity towards iron, but that avenue seems to me more riddled with problems. The copper tape is not nearly as effective as the antenna's, and I'm not sure why, but it might be something to consider to prevent a future mollusc takeover. 🐌

For Christmas this year I will be putting in a request to retire my iron tools. A shiny new copper trowel to imbue all that soil with even more critter kryptonite, wrapped in a little red bow, would be great.
 

Blue-Jay

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Two new beans for me this year. Falsetti pole dry on the left. Very productive. Cranberry type with slight pink base color and grayish black speckles and stripes. Flor de Junio. Right photo. Flower of June. The coloring on this bean kind of reminds me of Tamarahumara Purple Ojos.

Falsetti.jpgFlor De Junio.jpg
Falsetti - Pole Dry.................................................Flor de Junio
 

flowerbug

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You joke but I'd bet a few of us here would go to these lengths if they were necessary...

for a few of them i do it by keeping each selection in their own containers. last year i had these four beans:

DSC_20240101_101327-0500_2253_Gray_Green_thm.jpg


i planted two and each plant survived and gave me seeds so now i have about 80 (i have not counted them and many may not be viable but i don't know that yet either).

sometimes i group odd beans together in one container and each bean in that container may be unique in some way that caught my interest as i was shelling and sorting. those often are planted someplace i can keep an eye on them the next season so i can see what comes of them. some of the time it isn't what i expect but now i have enough experience to where i at least expect the unexpected... :)
 

Blue-Jay

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Giant Nilgiri - Pole dry photo left. This bean came to me in 2018 from a grower in Pennsylvania. Large seed. The bean comes from the mountain region of Nilgiri, India also called the Blue Mountains. Hemelvaartboontje Pole Dry. Purchase this bean from DeaFlora in 2014 and have been happy growing it from time to time ever since. The bean is said to have originated in Australia.

Giant Nilgiri.jpgHemelvaartboontje.jpg
Giant Nilgiri - Pole Dry..........................................Hemelvaartboontje - Pole Dry
 
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