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

heirloomgal

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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 .
The #1 thing when it comes to growing snap beans, and I'm probably biased because I love beans so much, is that there is so much out there. So much more variety and diversity than what most realize. Experiment! Especially if you haven't tried the roma/romano varieties, which are not a different species from pencil pod types, but they are still very different as a vegetable from them. I've encountered a few people who were quite thrilled with how good romano snap beans are. A texture sort of like meaty mushrooms. Fortex, that's a really good one too.
 

Shades-of-Oregon

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The #1 thing when it comes to growing snap beans, and I'm probably biased because I love beans so much, is that there is so much out there. So much more variety and diversity than what most realize. Experiment! Especially if you haven't tried the roma/romano varieties, which are not a different species from pencil pod types, but they are still very different as a vegetable from them. I've encountered a few people who were quite thrilled with how good romano snap beans are. A texture sort of like meaty mushrooms. Fortex, that's a really good one too.
Thank you for your referrals ..much appreciated . Yikes the number of beans to grow is overwhelming. One reason why I hold your experienced opinions first in my choice.
 

Blue-Jay

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Mbombo Green - Pole Dry Snap. Right Photo. The bean was nicely productive this past summer. This unique green colored seed can be used in soups or pods can be eaten as a green vegetable. The variety originates in Kenya Africa. To the people of the Kuba tribe Mbombo is associated with the Creator God. The bean itself is thought of as a sign of prosperity and bringing good fertility to the soil. Seed donor @Stephen Smith from Guthrie, Kentucky.

Ohio Pole - Pole Dry. Right Photo. This bean was one of my top producers this past summer with 20.75 ounces of beans (588 grams). About 95 days to first dry pods. Heavy producer of large 8 inch long pods. This late eighteenth century heirloom grown by the Miami people of Kekionga (present day Fort Wayne Indiana), as well as by the Delaware, Shawnee and Potawatomi peoples.

Mbombo Green.jpgOhio Pole.jpg

Mbombo Green................................................Ohio Pole
 

ruralmamma

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We had our first snow of the season Thursday and it left us with 8" of the white stuff. Found another tray of beans to shell but otherwise bean seed is packaged, labeled and waiting to grow again next year.

I'm on some forced downtime due to an ankle injury and using that time to peruse seed catalogs and make plans for next year. I also need to go back and add notes to the varieties I grew this year and note the vigor of each. We had several months of extreme drought which I'm sure affected my bean harvest in good ways and bad. Good because I had very few moldy beans and bad because the harvest on a few was greatly affected.
 

Neen5MI

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Ohio Pole - Pole Dry.

View attachment 70697

Mbombo Green................................................Ohio Pole
A friend picked up a handful of these at a local farmer's market for me several years ago, knowing I loved heirloom beans. They've become a staple in my bean garden. Beautiful, carefree, productive.
 
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