897tgigvib
Garden Master
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2012
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Just now got an email from Russ Crow, our Wanigan Associate.
He tells me that soon as he gets some chores done in the next few days, including filling out orders from his Bean Collectors Window website, http://www.abeancollectorswindow.com/outcrosses.html
that he will then make us a selection of the Beans he still has available and post them here. Not sure the exact way it'll work, but he'll explain.
Also, somehow on his website he's making a part of it just for us here. He does not know what kind of response it'll bring but I'm thinking it'll be a pretty good little response.
Imagine growing a kind of snap bean that George Washington used to eat, or one that just appeared on its own in Russ' garden, the result of an accidental hybridizing cross done by a bumblebee in 1979, that very few have ever grown, and then got packed away for almost 30 years. Or maybe some snap bean that has such a light green pod some folks called it a wax bean, or maybe a variation of a Turkey Craw bean that is extra large...or a bean called Apache with stunning 2 colors brown and white and looks delicious for a ham hock soup. Some are varieties or variations of varieties that were in catalogs when the older of us were kids but are no longer found, some in catalogs our grandparents used to get seeds from. Some of these, well, can't be found anywhere else at all.
It is in the works! In a small way, a legacy of the Wanigan Associates is coming to life, right here!
I sure hope everyone will find a way to at least grow a small patch of pole or bush, or viney...dry or snap beans.
Ya know, once it gets going, and some gain other varieties from other sources, it means that as an entirety, the network can have more than any individual. I'm getting that it is a sense of unity.
He tells me that soon as he gets some chores done in the next few days, including filling out orders from his Bean Collectors Window website, http://www.abeancollectorswindow.com/outcrosses.html
that he will then make us a selection of the Beans he still has available and post them here. Not sure the exact way it'll work, but he'll explain.
Also, somehow on his website he's making a part of it just for us here. He does not know what kind of response it'll bring but I'm thinking it'll be a pretty good little response.
Imagine growing a kind of snap bean that George Washington used to eat, or one that just appeared on its own in Russ' garden, the result of an accidental hybridizing cross done by a bumblebee in 1979, that very few have ever grown, and then got packed away for almost 30 years. Or maybe some snap bean that has such a light green pod some folks called it a wax bean, or maybe a variation of a Turkey Craw bean that is extra large...or a bean called Apache with stunning 2 colors brown and white and looks delicious for a ham hock soup. Some are varieties or variations of varieties that were in catalogs when the older of us were kids but are no longer found, some in catalogs our grandparents used to get seeds from. Some of these, well, can't be found anywhere else at all.
It is in the works! In a small way, a legacy of the Wanigan Associates is coming to life, right here!
I sure hope everyone will find a way to at least grow a small patch of pole or bush, or viney...dry or snap beans.
Ya know, once it gets going, and some gain other varieties from other sources, it means that as an entirety, the network can have more than any individual. I'm getting that it is a sense of unity.