Planting a Three Sisters Garden
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Peas grow best in cool weather, so they would likely struggle with the heat of summer, when beans would flourish.
As for a squash replacement—try cucumbers, watermelon, or pumpkins (which is techinically a squash, but may be more fun than a butternut or acorn squash).
I remember one year I went to a garden and they talked about the three sisters, My daughter works in a day care center and wants to teach the children that grocery stores don't grow vegetables, and she asked for my advice about what to grow. I thought a bout the three sisters story and thought it would be good to put a little culture into it. It would be better if they see the process of growing it, processing it, and shipping it to the grocery stores. But I'm just a big dreamer.
My family have lived in eastern Kentucky for two hundred plus years. They always planted the three sisters. I didn’t know it was called that until I was grown and had moved away. I’m 69 now and no longer need to have this large a garden. My mom’s choice of bean were an old variety called “Dutch white half runner bean”. She didn’t like fuzzy beans and these have smooth hulls. We planted whatever sweet corn was available and grew cushaw, a large squash and regional favorite. Cushaw grew huge, some crook-necks were 3 feet tall. We had to use a hatchet and hammer to cut into the hard rind! We baked the cushaw flesh with butter and brown sugar. What wonderful memories this article revived!
As a fluke, we grew a few peanut plants one year but I don’t remember them vining. The funniest thing was after they set fruit and then burrowed into the ground!! We harvested the plants but didn’t know what to do with them afterwards! I think we fed them to the squirrels. I live in Georgia now and find this hilarious!!
Thanks for your wonderful articles and recipes.
I thought that beans always fixed nitrogen into the soil. Why is an innoculant recommended in this case?
Legumes such as clover, peas and beans have root-colonizing rhizobacteria that can increase the availability of nitrogen to the plant by fixing nitrogen from the atmosphere. Each legume has a specific rhizobacteria that works best with that plant. Inoculating the legume seed with the correct bacteria ensures the legume will maximize nitrogen availability if nitrogen in the soil is low This is particularly important if you have not planted the legume species before, because the correct bacteria may not be present in the soil.
Hi, I've scrolled through the comments, searching for my answer and have not yet seen it. Wondering about the three sisters planting, can I plant peanuts in place of beans, or perhaps some on one side and runner beans on another side of the garden. I've been looking at the diagram, for the four sisters, where pumpkins and melons are used in the outer corners.
We admit, we’ve never tried peanuts! I suppose they are a legume, so they would offer similar nitrogen-fixing benefits. As long as you don’t think they would be too strong to pull down the corn, it seems worth an experiment. We’d love to hear if it works out!
Is this planting available in the Garden Planner?
You can definitely plan a 3-Sisters planting plan in the Garden Planner. You do that by adding the plants individually in the layout pattern that you want to use. Once you’ve added your first squash, corn and beans you can then use the Selection tool to select and copy them and then paste that pattern as many times as you need to to cover the area you have.
There are some good examples available here:
A simple traditional layout: https://gardenplanner.almanac.com/garden-plans/692612/
A larger row-based 3 sisters layout (from a community garden in Africa): https://gardenplanner.almanac.com/garden-plans/283710/kabingo-africa/2012/kabingo-three-sisters-garden/
An interesting 4 Sisters layout which adds sunflowers: https://gardenplanner.almanac.com/garden-plans/576922/usa/2015/4-sisters/
Feel free to email our Garden Planner customer support staff if you have further questions here: https://gardenplanner.almanac.com/contact.aspx
See Jeremy’s great feedback below. If you watch the video on this page, you’ll see a very nice combination which includes: Scarlet runner beans, oldcrest sweetcorn and the old French heirloom red pumpkin Rouge Vif D’ Etampes. We also added Monarda ( Bee balm) as a fourth Sister.