Zeedman
Garden Master
Two beans per pot are quite comfortable together.
I thought that pot sounded a little large...I like this thought, especially with climbing beans. A 90 cm pot is about 3-1/2". That should give enough room for two plants if you leave them enough room between pots when transplanting them outside. Just need to think about it a bit.
The size 32 peat pots I use for pole beans are 2.5" square, and 2.25" tall. I started planting 2 beans per pot in case one didn't come up, and thinned down to 1 before planting. Then after losing a few plants one year, I had the idea to thin some time after planting, in case something damaged a seedling... and of course, forgot to thin later. Ooops.
 The bean pairs were spaced 12" apart, and to my surprise, did fine at that spacing; so I've continued that practice. From one 8-pot peat strip, I can potentially get 16 plants - which allows more beans to be started per tray. There are some very vigorous beans that I still thin to one per pot (Kentucky Wonder, Bird Egg #3) but pots of 2, spaced 12" apart in the row, has become my new default.
 The bean pairs were spaced 12" apart, and to my surprise, did fine at that spacing; so I've continued that practice. From one 8-pot peat strip, I can potentially get 16 plants - which allows more beans to be started per tray. There are some very vigorous beans that I still thin to one per pot (Kentucky Wonder, Bird Egg #3) but pots of 2, spaced 12" apart in the row, has become my new default.At 2/pot, bean seedlings are not crowded up to the point where they have their first true leaf. If held much longer than that, I have to thin them to 1/pot to avoid stunting. I gradually thin direct seeded beans to 4/hill, then 2/hill when runners appear. That 2-stage thinning paid off this year, when deer ate some plants from several hills - but left at least one per hill undamaged.
 
					
				 
 
		 
 
		


 
 
		
 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		

