- Thread starter
- #2,901
digitS'
Garden Master
Carried out and applied some composted chicken manure to the 2nd planting of green beans. Some gardeners would never think to apply fertilizer to beans but I find that it makes a difference.
The information that I read was that the bean plant goes into its nitrogen-fixing mode only quite late in its life cycle. The information was based on commercial fields where machines harvested the beans all at once, for processing and sale.
Of course, gardeners can leave the bean plants through the season if conditions are right. I'd prefer not to do that since a second picking doesn't amount to a lot on the bush beans I grow and there is a real chance of spider mites showing up in their enormous numbers.
Before and after the shoveling and sprinkling of the compost there was a fair amount of weeding. I kinda missed some areas with the rototiller earlier this week ... missed a lot but that is common. Used a spading fork and the 4-prong cultivator and did a better job than my down-&-dirty technique with the rototiller.
Steve
The information that I read was that the bean plant goes into its nitrogen-fixing mode only quite late in its life cycle. The information was based on commercial fields where machines harvested the beans all at once, for processing and sale.
Of course, gardeners can leave the bean plants through the season if conditions are right. I'd prefer not to do that since a second picking doesn't amount to a lot on the bush beans I grow and there is a real chance of spider mites showing up in their enormous numbers.
Before and after the shoveling and sprinkling of the compost there was a fair amount of weeding. I kinda missed some areas with the rototiller earlier this week ... missed a lot but that is common. Used a spading fork and the 4-prong cultivator and did a better job than my down-&-dirty technique with the rototiller.
Steve