Hay Bay! You win the first dry Beans of the year award!!!
I'm not too far behind you though. Maybe 3 or 4 weeks for bone dry pods.
But my Early Pillsbury Purple Seeded Golden Podded Snow Peas bred true!!! That will be their preliminary generic variety name until a better name comes along. I picked the first dry pod from one, and it had 5 purple pea seeds in it!!! I tagged that plant as number 1. Each of the 10 plants will have its seeds saved separately. NEW VARIETY OF PEA! These are actually ripening dry pea seeds before the one Alaska pea with the largest pods I'm saving for seed.
Chickasaw is a full vigorous half runner, all of them
All your Beans have plants in stages of early flowering and small beans now Russ!

Among your Beans, I think Vermont Appaloosa will be first, but it will be a good race to first dry pod.
Nova Star is turning out to be a highly vigorous and very tall pole. Even though I guess there is not supposed to be hybrid vigor in Beans, they sure are growing like the vigor of a hybrid tomato. Be ready for tall heavy vines from them. I may have to add another top run of twine for them. And yes Digit, they have reached the top netting and are growing through it. They even grew faster than the Dow Purple Pod, the White Seeded Kentucky Wonder, and the Meraviglia Di Venizia Wax Pole. They tied with Dow for first to flower among the pole beans.
Powder Star is vigorous too and heavy, but not as fast. The very late Star varieties have slowed their vining growth, but look very healthy still. Blue/Gold Star and the other Sierra Madre Copper Valley Star varieties...I truly believe they are day hour sensitive. They slowed as the solstice approached. Those varieties are grown during the winter down there. But they'll be alright! They got a good early start, still look real good, just making short internodes right now. My days will shorten soon enough with this forest clearing garden.
Oh! I've been getting good samples of Berries! nyum nyum Loganberries, my favorite! And sweet and subtle Fall Gold Raspberies! Slurpz! Those two I will sure try crossing next year! Boysenberries and Tayberries are also real good and super productive. Black Satin keeps on fooling me and I always pick them too soon. Guess they have to further ripen a couple weeks after turning black. No Marionberries this year. That plant was just a rooted cutting when I got it this spring. Laciniatus made a few flowers but not sure if they took yet. Pretty small little plant that I hastily dug from the side of a dirt road, but she's growing real nicely, just small. Cool thin red stems, and cool lacy looking leaves.