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Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Green Beans
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Hi there.
Your articles have helped me with my garden so much. Thank you.
My pole beans are growing on their trellis and flowering and looking great. The problem is that the first part of June i started getting a handful of beans then we left for vacation for 10 days. We got back and the plants had grown a great deal but have had zero beans since then :(. I see the bees pollinating them and they are looking good and vibrant but no beans. Can you help?
If you have birds in your garden they like to nip the flowers off. I have a garden full of Sparrows and they eat most of my bean flowers! (And my peas shoots when I try and grow peas).
I haven't harvested one bean yet and it's already August! I was thinking of netting my beans next year.
I've heard that bean plants will be lush if fertilized, but they won't produce beans. So, a bit of compost is better. I'm not an expert, though.
I heard that too! In fact, in this very article... "If necessary, begin fertilizing after heavy bloom and the set of pods. Avoid using high-nitrogen fertilizer, or you will get lush foliage and few beans. A side dressing of compost or aged manure halfway through the growing season is a good alternative to liquid fertilizer."
Need advice on planting depth and spacing of Fava beans (aka broad beans) in garden.
Garden in on Long Island, NY and gets full sun. This will be my first attempt at growing these beans. Thanks for all your suggestions!
My Blue Lake green beans are flat instead of round and are a light green. Any suggestions?
I planted pole beans last month and they have yet to come above ground. Should I be patient or replant? I have yellow, black eye, and peans which are growing well. Please advise.
I thought about what you said and have finally figured it out. I thought I had a lot of sun but now realize it's mostly indirect sun with only 1-6 hours of direct sun each day depending on the window. So that will make quite a bit of difference. Thanks!
Thank you for your quick reply. I'd say however, it's the opposite. The beans are in a south facing window in Toronto with a great deal of light (maybe too much light) and my place on average is 75 degrees F.
I do have more seeds to try again, but are you sure I should throw these out as the plants look very healthy; just very tall.
Thanks again,
Michele
New gardener & 1st time bean grower
We never said throw them out! Just asked if you had seeds to try again, ideally outdoors. The conditions you describe suggest that the seedlings are reaching for the sunlight, while the (warm) room temp is conducive to growth, too. They may be/become spindly鈥攏ot strong enough to bear the weight of more leaves and later, beans. Let them grow and see what happens. Gardening is a glorious experiment! Thanks for asking, too.