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

Shades-of-Oregon

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Question ? The grape vines are in a 4’ high raised bed. Been seriously thinking about tacking out some of the vines and replacing them with pole, runner or vine beans . Any ideas which beans to try that would best fit a 15’ wide area with cable wires up 5’ for the vines to cling to?
It’s easy pickens from this high bed. Zone 8b.
 

heirloomgal

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Question ? The grape vines are in a 4’ high raised bed. Been seriously thinking about tacking out some of the vines and replacing them with pole, runner or vine beans . Any ideas which beans to try that would best fit a 15’ wide area with cable wires up 5’ for the vines to cling to?
It’s easy pickens from this high bed. Zone 8b.
So many choices for that @Shades-of-Oregon! You want fresh eating beans? Runner beans?
 

Zeedman

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Question ? The grape vines are in a 4’ high raised bed. Been seriously thinking about tacking out some of the vines and replacing them with pole, runner or vine beans . Any ideas which beans to try that would best fit a 15’ wide area with cable wires up 5’ for the vines to cling to?
It’s easy pickens from this high bed. Zone 8b.
There are 2 possible sources of Oregon-specific growing info that might be of help;

Seed Ambassador Project. (can't verify if they are still active, no recent posts on their website.)

Peace Seedlings (formerly Dr. Alan Kapular's 'Peace Seeds'.)

One question to consider is what kind of beans you want: Snap? Shelly? Dry? In your climate, you might be able to succession plant, with common pole beans (P. vulgaris) in warm weather, and runner beans in cooler weather. Runner bean roots will even over-winter & re-sprout in Spring, in areas where the ground doesn't freeze... perennial beans. 🫘
 

Blue-Jay

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Lazy - Pole Snap left photo. It was given to me as Lazy Wife but this is not the original Lazy Wife so I'm going to call it Lazy. The original Lazy Wife is a nearly round and glossy, but in the 1980's a white kidney shaped bean was marketed. The flavor of this bean was not of the orginal. Originally "Lazy Wife" had been carried by W. Atlee Burpee starting in 1885, who obtained it from Mennonite immigrants in Pennsylvania who had grown it for generations. Burpee dropped it in the early 1900's. Burpee's strain was obtained by Derek Fell, a former Burpee Seed catalog manager, from Bill Byrd of Carversville Pa, who had grown & saved seed of the original "Lazy Wife" ever since Burpee dropped it from their catalog.

Louisiana - Pole Snap. Right Photo. I have grown this bean since the early 1980's and it's one of my all time favorites pole beans. Early with green round pods with purple striping. I can often pick these at about 7 inches long.

Lazy In Space.jpgLouisiana.jpg
 

Shades-of-Oregon

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There are 2 possible sources of Oregon-specific growing info that might be of help;

Seed Ambassador Project. (can't verify if they are still active, no recent posts on their website.)

Peace Seedlings (formerly Dr. Alan Kapular's 'Peace Seeds'.)

One question to consider is what kind of beans you want: Snap? Shelly? Dry? In your climate, you might be able to succession plant, with common pole beans (P. vulgaris) in warm weather, and runner beans in cooler weather. Runner bean roots will even over-winter & re-sprout in Spring, in areas where the ground doesn't freeze... perennial beans. 🫘
Would like to try perennial beans . Pole beans for summer and cool weather beans to start early spring.
And snap . I like the idea for succession planting, lately we are all coping with a changing climate every grow season is different lately. Have to start seedlings in my heated greenhouse to get them outside when temps are warm enough to harden off seedlings and ground temps warm to plant outside.

Oregon zone 6b in western coastal areas . Usually the ONSU has great selections and recommendations for several different pole beans . Most beans will grow in late spring when ground temps warm to 60F- 65 F.
Which is usually in mid-late June. Roughly 4 months of growing time.
Thank you for your time , advice and links.
 

heirloomgal

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Both would be nice .
@Zeedman made a good point that didn't occur to me given where I live, you could grown runner beans in your area as a perennial. There are so many gorgeous and extremely productive ones out there, with either red, pink or white flowers. The beans are good for eating too - a nice plus with all those flowers and vigorous vines. I love Piekny Jas and Sunset runner.

But for regular snap beans - oooh, so many good ones!! @Blue-Jay has just so many amazing fresh eating beans - Louisiana pole, Green Savage, Landfrauen, La Vigneronne, Champagne, Fasold (really love this one).
 

Shades-of-Oregon

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@Zeedman made a good point that didn't occur to me given where I live, you could grown runner beans in your area as a perennial. There are so many gorgeous and extremely productive ones out there, with either red, pink or white flowers. The beans are good for eating too - a nice plus with all those flowers and vigorous vines. I love Piekny Jas and Sunset runner.

But for regular snap beans - oooh, so many good ones!! @Blue-Jay has just so many amazing fresh eating beans - Louisiana pole, Green Savage, Landfrauen, La Vigneronne, Champagne, Fasold (really love this one).
Piekny Jas & sunset runner will look into .
Snaps are overwhelming when deciding which ones. L. Pole , Green Savage etc all will make the grade…just a tricky decision… maybe time to bite the bullet and just try 3or4 rows of each. Mmm- Looking up Fasold. Oh nice French climbing long and thin. Those look tasty. I remember discussions on that one.
Thank you again for you advice and your experience of course adds trust and confidence in decisions .
 
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