All the beans I transplanted have really seemed to kick in in the last couple weeks... the first pole bean (an Auntie Wilder) hit the top of its pole yesterday! It's beautiful to see.
Gordo, one of the "unknown" network beans I'm growing out, sure seems to be living up to its name! The dry beans looked pretty unassuming, but boy howdy, the leaves are almost as big as my hand. Huge, lush plants. (Bush, but probably 2+ feet tall.) The "unknown" Mugungi has just started putting up some wimpy-looking runners at about the same rate as the Flor de Mayo I'm growing, so I think Mugungi will end up being a semi-runner too.
Harriet's Black Hook is looking pretty great for how poorly it started off... 3 of the 5 beans I got germinated, and that was a pleasant surprise for the state the bean seeds were in (oooooold and shrivelly).
I was laughing a couple posts above when flowerbug said sometimes beans can grow new leaves from the cotyledons... our cat managed to eat the tops off two baby beans, and of course out of the 50 he had to choose from, he decided to eat Harriet's Black Hook, the one bean I didn't have any replacements for. But lo and behold, they both sprouted new leaves from the cotyledons and a bit of naked stem. (*phew!!!*) Those two are a bit behind still, but the one that didn't get eaten is the tallest of the pole beans in the bed out front.
Blue Heron and Small Speckled Bunch have both been struggling in the back corner bed... apparently there's some crazy slug pressure out there I didn't know about. The weird thing is that they are right next to the Auntie Wilder that topped its pole yesterday... the only difference is I planted the network beans as germinated seeds, where the Auntie Wilder was transplanted about a foot tall. That foot of height was just enough so that the slugs weren't interested, I guess. The transplanted beans take a LONG time to settle back in after you transplant them, but the pests find them so much less desirable, it seems like transplanting them is worth it.
Small Speckled Bunch has gotten its runners up in the last couple days, though, so hopefully it's only up from here (hardy-har-har)!
Rwanda Rainbow looks like it's struggling, too... not quite sure why. Maybe just age? Either that or they may not actually be pole beans. There is one pod on one of the plants, though.
Lekatt and Giant Red Tarka are both looking great.
I put about a hundred tulle bags on various bean blossoms two weeks ago, and now I can see some little baby beans starting to grow in a couple of the bags, huzzah!
Question for you guys -- has anyone grown Tzutuhil Red? I was under the impression it was a bush bean, but about a 30% of the ones I am growing have started putting up long runners. (This is the first time I've grown them.) Is this normal, or should I maybe dig the ones with runners out of my bush bean bed and treat them as a possible outcross?