What is your favourite warm season vegetable or are there too many to choose from? Top of the list for many a gardener is the humble bean, because in warm weather, they’re so easy to germinate. In fact my bean crop was directly sown on a Monday and they were up by Thursday. But how do you get a continuous crop of beans?
Corinne mentions bush beans, but we're not talking some sort of wild bean that grows on a bush, in fact bush beans is another name for dwarf beans. More along the style of French beans such as butter beans or Cherokee Wax butter beans. Scientifically beans are Phaselous vulgaris which covers just about every type of bean seed that you can buy. Dwarf or bush beans grow into a small, bushy shape, usually 60cm tall or less and don't need staking. This year I planted my bean seeds closer together than normal on using the premise that if we had a run of cloudy days and they started to climb, they would support each other. This season we did have lots of cloudy rainy, days, they didn't start to climb, but did in fact support each other at around 50-60cm. The only tricky part was needing to carefully pick your way through the thicket of bean foliage to harvest the beans without breaking any branchlets. Let’s find out more about tips and tricks with bush bean planting by listening to the podcast. I’m speaking with Corinne Mossati founder of https://thegourmanticgarden.com TIP: