There are more rats almost everywhere than you realize. If you are seeing lots of holes then there are more than just two rats. Seeing rats in broad daylight (in my personal experience) usually means that there are so many rats in the burrow system that the smaller, younger rats get bullied...
Wondering about bush dry beans that might show some resistance or tolerance to white mold (Sclerotinia). I really have a problem many years in my bush beans with white mold taking off during prolonged wet periods, which we get at least every other year. I'd like a high yield dry bean that I...
I was noodling around on the internet looking for information on bean crosses and stuff (as one does) and I ran across this article talking about flower morphology and outcrossing in domesticated and wild species of Phaseolus.
There were lots of interesting tidbits with links to other articles...
Yes. You unknowingly planted some seeds of F1 Avalon crosses in with your Avalon seeds, so they produced F2 seed. The color patterns, shape, size of the crosses you found might not show up again if you plant some of those F2 seeds. Because the F2s will be segregating and becoming more...
Frost irrigation does work, but there is a limit to how cold it can be and still be protective. I also think that you managed to thread the needle with your pole beans and keep them protected.
The big problem with MORE ICE = MORE BETTER idea is that ice is HEAVY. Pole beans probably...
It seems safe to assume that SOME of the Avalon you planted was F1, since you are seeing multiple different colors and shapes. But even in a single pod that contains a cross, it isn't likely that ALL the seeds are necessarily crosses, because the bean would also have been exposed to its own...
In beans, the seedcoat is always maternal tissue, and the size and shape of the seed is controlled by the mother plant as well. So the offspring seed of a cross will look like seed of the parent variety, Avalon in your case. It would technically be F1 hybrid seed.
When you plant that seed...
I grew Cornplanter Purple this year, it is seed I originally got from someone at a local seed swap. I have grown it once before, but I forgot about it and only remembered it was there when I was weeding an overgrown corner, and harvested the remaining sound dry beans.
This year I grew it more...
I've gotten good amounts of seed or dry pods from all the beans I got from you except Hiawatha. I just noticed the first maturing pods on the Hiawatha the other day, but I don't have any harvested yet. It is far enough along that I should get a good amount of seed. There are pleanty of full...
That seems to have happened to me this year, on three trout/cattle pattern beans I bought from Russ's store. Some were more extreme than others. The Jacob's Cattle Amish was supposed to do this very little, and the color/white balance is still pretty good. Not as much white as what I planted...
Fresh shelled seed from dry pods of Dolloff and Golden Lima. If they aren't one variety with two names they are so close of sister varieties that they are indistinquishable. Vines and pods are the same, and flower and set dry pods at the same time. Very productive and early for a pole dry...
On that third photo, are those ants digging into the pod between the top two visible beans? I have a few pods of Cornplanter purple that I've noticed something a bit similar, where the pod appears to be splitting open, but not so extreme as in your pictures. The splitting pod on my beans are...
This year I did a small comparison trial between Dolloff pole bean and Golden Lima, Leigh Hurley on her old "Extreme Gardener" blog speculated that they might be descendants of Horticultural Lima, or one or both might BE Horticultural Lima. I planted about 15 row feet of a 50 foot row of...
For the first time this year I am growing Succotash pole bean. I've had the seed before, maybe more than once from seed trades etc, but this is the first time I've ever actually planted it. I planted in early June with most of my beans, I'm not sure the exact date, but all the pole beans got...
The design of the Winstrip trays is to maximize air pruning of the roots so the "waste" spaces around each cell is to get more air to each cell. I haven't used them, but they are the latest hip thing in small veg growing.
I don't use ebb and flow irrigation, I just like a tray that holds more...
I think most beans can be used interchangeably for the most part. I like larger seeded beans in soup and stew, and tend to use smaller seeded beans for things like bean salad, burrito /taco filling, and things like beans and rice. Personally I do not like black beans, or any dark colored bean...
I haven't personally used these, but many veg farmers in the Northeast US are switching to them seems like. I've always used tobacco float trays for my seedlings.
These don't have the same volume of the roottrainers though.
https://fedcoseeds.com/ogs/mini-wini-large-cell-tray-8814