digitS'
Garden Master
I have only grown Vigna unguiculata once and the vines spent much of the early season in a plastic tunnel, then climbed the hoops thru the summer. That worked fairly well but kept me from dismantling the whole thing as I would have preferred. Phaseolus vulgaris, the common bean, is in my garden every year. I can't really say how the yard-long beans did in cold weather because I was determined to keep them away from it.
Here's my experience with the common bush beans in the cold, DL. I am allowed to relive this every year because I tend not to plant them early. By the end of the season, I've often got more beans than I know what to do with! Early sowings can go to pole beans, which have a tendency to produce early enuf and then continue until the late sowings of the bush beans kick in.
They can't take the frost. A light frost will burn the top leaves and they are about as sensitive as cucumbers. Howsomeever . . . . . Cool, wet weather doesn't seem to slow the maturing of their crop of greenbeans, at all!
I am often a little hard-pressed to get out there on my stool and pick the beans during comfortable moments. The don't really seem to slow down in cold conditions and unload by the bucketful!
Steve
Here's my experience with the common bush beans in the cold, DL. I am allowed to relive this every year because I tend not to plant them early. By the end of the season, I've often got more beans than I know what to do with! Early sowings can go to pole beans, which have a tendency to produce early enuf and then continue until the late sowings of the bush beans kick in.
They can't take the frost. A light frost will burn the top leaves and they are about as sensitive as cucumbers. Howsomeever . . . . . Cool, wet weather doesn't seem to slow the maturing of their crop of greenbeans, at all!
I am often a little hard-pressed to get out there on my stool and pick the beans during comfortable moments. The don't really seem to slow down in cold conditions and unload by the bucketful!
Steve