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Dwarf French Beans
Good afternoon,
I'm thinking about growing some French beans this year and, as always, I've got a couple of questions! 1. Can anyone recommend a variety - I've been told that 'Hilton' is the most commonly grown, but I liked the look of the 'Purple Teepee' variety; has anyone grow these before? 2. If French beans are allowed to developed full pods, can the beans be stored for cooking over winter? Yet again, many thanks in advance. Regards, Andrew |
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Dwarf French Beans
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Dwarf French Beans
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Dwarf French Beans
I was about to say why grow bungalows when you can have multi-storey?
-- Derby, England. Don't try to email me using "REPLY" as the email address is NoSpam. Our email address is "thewoodies2 at ntlworld dot com" Is their a reason for dwarf french beans? IMHO climbing french beans look the same taste the same don't take up so much room as well as not getting covered in mud and not giving you serious back pain to boot. My favourite climbing french beans are cobra and diamant Gill M |
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Dwarf French Beans
The message from "ajr" contains these words: Good afternoon, I'm thinking about growing some French beans this year and, as always, I've got a couple of questions! 1. Can anyone recommend a variety - I've been told that 'Hilton' is the most commonly grown, but I liked the look of the 'Purple Teepee' variety; has anyone grow these before? 2. If French beans are allowed to developed full pods, can the beans be stored for cooking over winter? Yet again, many thanks in advance. Regards, Andrew I grew Purple Teepee last year and they were great. Very prolific; they just went on and on producing lovely purple beans for weeks. Often special varieties are selected for producing dried beans but I have successfully allowed Blue Lake beans to mature on the plant and then stored them as dried beans, haricot style. You can let them go dry on the plant towards the end of the season or, if not fully dry, hang them up somewhere on the plant to finish drying out. Janet G |
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Dwarf French Beans
"Janet Galpin" wrote in message ... The message from "ajr" contains these words: Good afternoon, I'm thinking about growing some French beans this year and, as always, I've got a couple of questions! 1. Can anyone recommend a variety - I've been told that 'Hilton' is the most commonly grown, but I liked the look of the 'Purple Teepee' variety; has anyone grow these before? 2. If French beans are allowed to developed full pods, can the beans be stored for cooking over winter? Yet again, many thanks in advance. Regards, Andrew I grew Purple Teepee last year and they were great. Very prolific; they just went on and on producing lovely purple beans for weeks. Often special varieties are selected for producing dried beans but I have successfully allowed Blue Lake beans to mature on the plant and then stored them as dried beans, haricot style. You can let them go dry on the plant towards the end of the season or, if not fully dry, hang them up somewhere on the plant to finish drying out. Janet G Thanks for the advice everyone. The reason I was thinking of growing dwarf beans was because I thought that they would be easier to manage, but it looks as though I might as well grow a 'full' variety! Although I think that Purple Teepee looks promising. Cheers, Andrew |
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Dwarf French Beans
On 1 Mar, 15:38, "ajr" wrote:
"Janet Galpin" wrote in message ... The message from "ajr" contains these words: Good afternoon, I'm thinking about growing some French beans this year and, as always, I've got a couple of questions! 1. Can anyone recommend a variety - I've been told that 'Hilton' is the most commonly grown, but I liked the look of the 'Purple Teepee' variety; has anyone grow these before? 2. If French beans are allowed to developed full pods, can the beans be stored for cooking over winter? Yet again, many thanks in advance. Regards, Andrew I grew Purple Teepee last year and they were great. Very prolific; they just went on and on producing lovely purple beans for weeks. Often special varieties are selected for producing dried beans but I have successfully allowed Blue Lake beans to mature on the plant and then stored them as dried beans, haricot style. You can let them go dry on the plant towards the end of the season or, if not fully dry, hang them up somewhere on the plant to finish drying out. Janet G Thanks for the advice everyone. The reason I was thinking of growing dwarf beans was because I thought that they would be easier to manage, but it looks as though I might as well grow a 'full' variety! Although I think that Purple Teepee looks promising. Cheers, Andrew There are many good varieties of climbing french beans, one advantage is that they are stringless so can be left longer on the plant. I think the reason for the growing of dwarf French beans was that they crop 12 weeks from sowing where as Runner beans crop 14 weeks from sowing. If you let them mature you will end up with haricot beans. David Hill Abacus Nurseries |
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