|
Phaseolus vulgaris
Wax Beans, Yellow Snap Beans, Pink Beans
Easy and fast-growing, nutritious and versatile in cooking, beans come in many varieties. Snap Beans need only a short growing season, and are rich in vitamins A and C, plus calcium and iron. Harvest before beans form. Eat Shell Beans fresh when beans fill out pods, but are not full size. Dry and store beans once pods shrivel. Many varieties can be eaten fresh or dried for storage. Support long, twining vines of Pole Beans on string tied between stakes, on a trellis or fence. Self-supporting, 1- to 2-feet-tall Bush Beans produce fewer beans than Pole types, but can be grown in containers. Most like warm weather, so plant long after last spring frosts. Seedlings transplant poorly. Treating seeds with a legume inoculant increases harvest. Plant Snap Beans in warm soil at 2-week intervals, and harvest crops all summer. Keep moist. With all beans, watch for Mexican bean beetle and downy mildew. Do not water overhead or work with wet plants, to avoid spreading leaf diseases. Pollinated by bees, so spray any chemicals at dusk when bees are gone. |

Golden-yellow beans are colorful in soups, salads, and stews. Varieties such as 'Sunrae' produce extra early fruit and heavy yields.
|
Attributes - Phaseolus vulgaris
Plant Type: Annual
Height: 6 ft. to 10 ft.
Width: 1 ft.
Sunlight: Full Sun
Notes: Edible. Susceptible to Aphids, Beetles, Black Spot, Damping-off, Fusarium Wilt, Powdery Mildew, Rust, Spider Mites, Whiteflies.
|
Related Plants
Phaseolus caracalla, Phaseolus coccineus, Phaseolus limensis, Phaseolus vulgaris 'Kentucky Blue'
|