heirloomgal
Garden Addicted
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2021
- Messages
- 4,859
- Reaction score
- 15,898
- Points
- 265
- Location
- Northern Ontario, Canada
@Blue-Jay I have a new respect for your dedication to growing beans. They're a difficult master to serve, and I'm on year 2 now of not having a great bean year. I'd think of giving up if I didn't enjoy growing them so much, it's amazing that you have persisted for all these years regardless of the challenges you've faced in various seasons. So many animals love to eat them as seedlings, voles easily destroy their roots, too dry is a problem, too wet is a problem. And they aren't always healthy plants. Virtually none of that is the case for tomatoes! Yet somehow, tomatoes are not nearly as satisfying to grow as heirloom beans.
I can't gripe totally, because I have had some plants do very well this year. Just not all of them, and for me, that's a problem. I like everything to do fantastically. August was so dry and hot, and now we're scheduled for - possibly - extended rain. The weather network shows 3 rain symbols for the next 3 days, so we'll see. The percentage of chance though is only 40%. I went out and picked a lot today just in case, and it did really rain hard this evening, but still I wonder if I should have harvested more or pulled out more plants by the roots. Decisions decisions.
When you harvest beans in anticipation of rain, what is it your looking for in the not yet dry pod? Today as I went through them I went mostly but feel and color. If I could feel distinct beans in the pods and the neck was a bit dry I pulled them, and if the pod color had changed like how the greens will sometimes get yellow or whitish, or really speckled pods where they weren't before. Of course I always pick what seems to have the most developed seeds, but I know you can get them quite early on and they'll still be fine, I'd rather err on the side of picking too early vs too late when it comes to moisture.
I can't gripe totally, because I have had some plants do very well this year. Just not all of them, and for me, that's a problem. I like everything to do fantastically. August was so dry and hot, and now we're scheduled for - possibly - extended rain. The weather network shows 3 rain symbols for the next 3 days, so we'll see. The percentage of chance though is only 40%. I went out and picked a lot today just in case, and it did really rain hard this evening, but still I wonder if I should have harvested more or pulled out more plants by the roots. Decisions decisions.
When you harvest beans in anticipation of rain, what is it your looking for in the not yet dry pod? Today as I went through them I went mostly but feel and color. If I could feel distinct beans in the pods and the neck was a bit dry I pulled them, and if the pod color had changed like how the greens will sometimes get yellow or whitish, or really speckled pods where they weren't before. Of course I always pick what seems to have the most developed seeds, but I know you can get them quite early on and they'll still be fine, I'd rather err on the side of picking too early vs too late when it comes to moisture.