Perennial Beans - Printable Version +- Garden And Gossip Forums (https://gardenandgossip.org) +-- Forum: From seed to plant (edibles) (https://gardenandgossip.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=11) +--- Forum: Everything Legumes (https://gardenandgossip.org/forumdisplay.php?fid=49) +--- Thread: Perennial Beans (/showthread.php?tid=447) |
Perennial Beans - Veggie - 08-08-2020 [attachment=966][attachment=965] I never uproot bean plants when they reach the end of the days - not just because they're supposed to have nitrogen nodules or summat on the roots but because they may regrow. This is a Gigantes bean and its 4 years old!! Every year it puts up new growth in spring and latches onto whatever it can find. I helped it with a cane this year and its now scrambling into an apricot tree. I've also had success with Firestorm RBs and Broad beans. Worth a try! RE: Perennial Beans - Bren - 08-08-2020 In the past I’ve potted up scarlet emperor beans leaving them to over winter in the GH, didn’t do it this year but I did have 2 plants survive outdoors and they’re doing well. Will be picking beans tomorrow RE: Perennial Beans - Vinny - 09-08-2020 I just wonder what the failure rate is? RE: Perennial Beans - Mikey - 10-08-2020 Do they become less productive in following years as suggested?. RE: Perennial Beans - Veggie - 10-08-2020 (09-08-2020, 10:39 AM)Vinny Wrote: I just wonder what the failure rate is?No idea - but does it matter? All you have to do is cut the plant down at the end of the season and leave the roots in situ. If it comes back, its a bonus. (10-08-2020, 09:19 PM)Mikey Wrote: Do they become less productive in following years as suggested?.No idea - this is my stock answer as I've retired from bean counting. RE: Perennial Beans - Mikey - 10-08-2020 I don’t know you ask a serious question and look what you get. If you can’t tell if the productivity has fallen off that’s good enough for me. RE: Perennial Beans - Jimny14 - 11-08-2020 Hhmmm,I'm up for trying this veggie. Will try with broads and cfb. Think I'll just mulch with some fym and see what happens. Worst case I'll just sow fresh seed next year. RE: Perennial Beans - Mikey - 11-08-2020 You can do both the existing root will just be further advanced next year giving lovely pods earlier. RE: Perennial Beans - Veggie - 12-08-2020 (11-08-2020, 11:57 PM)Mikey Wrote: You can do both the existing root will just be further advanced next year giving lovely pods earlier.Not necessarily!! The existing root will grow when it judges the soil/weather is right, not before. If you start seeds in modules. you can start earlier and take a gamble on whether the weather will be right when they're ready to plat out. RE: Perennial Beans - Mikey - 12-08-2020 I’m not as on it as you V, so I tend to be a little behind nature not showing her what to do. I’ve also only got the three greenhouses so I’m limited on indoor space and beds so these tend to be for tomatoes not other veg. |