The Plant Lady

How to Grow Beans

Growing beans is easy; figuring out the different varieties and when to harvest for which type of bean you want is what I found difficult. It’s definitely worth it, though. Very productive for the very little room they take up in the garden, and they are good for the soil while attracting pollinators. Bees love them! They can also be useful for providing shade screens for other plants. As far as pests go, I have problems with spider mite…and powdery mildew – but I’m working on a method to keep those two under control.

Botanical Information

Taxonomy

History

Physical Description

Bean Types and Varieties

Categorization

The way that the family of beans is organized was pretty confusing to me. It seems that there are a bunch of different names for the same type of bean (french, snap, string, kenya, kidney, haricot, borlotti, cannellini, and flageolet are all the same type of bean!!), although they are differentiated by how long they are left on the plant, but then those all of various names belonging to the same one. Hopefully writing this helps straighten out my understanding of the bean – and maybe somebody else’s too.

Major Classifications

Here are the major groupings of bean types. Most of these types are then broken down into further sub-classifications, as well as having names for the bean depending on how long it has been left on the vine to ripen.

  1. French Beans:
    • include snap beans, string beans, kidney beans, etc
    • not really french at all; native to the Americas
    • wind-pollinated, so they fruit more reliably than runner beans (which are insect reliant)
    • Sub classifications based on ripeness, or time left on vine:
      • green beans: unripe french beans; can be picked anytime before their beans inside start to show; sweet and tender
      • kidney beans (aka haricot beans): left to ripen fully on the plant; when dried they can store for many months
      • cannellini beans (aka flageolet beans): half-ripe french beans; shelled and eaten like peas
    • Sub classifications based on color
      • borlotti beans (aka cranberry beans, borlotto, crab eye, roman, romano, rosecoco, saluggia) are white with red spots or splotches, sometimes most of the bean will be red; can be used interchangeably with pinto beans; can be shelled and eaten as cannellini or left on the plant to ripen fully and eaten as kidney beans
      • green
      • yellow
      • gold
      • purple
      • red
      • multicolored
    • Sub classifications based on growth habit:
      • filet beans (aka fine) are bean pods that grow long and thin
      • pole beans (aka climbers) are usually indeterminate with a continuous harvest; need something to climb up
      • bush beans (aka dwarf beans): usually are determinate, with just one big harvest
      • semi-dwarf beans: kinda bushy, kinda climbing
  2. Runner Beans:
    • insect pollinated
    • notorious for producing a glut, so don’t plant too many
    • pick them young; they turn tough and stringy as they stay on the vine
    • very easy to grow
    • Sub Classifications based on growth habit:
      • pole beans (also known as climbers)
      • dwarf bush beans
    • Colorsof runner beans available:
      • scarlet (red flower produces red or purple speckled beans)
      • white (white flowers produce white beans)
      • multicolored, spotted or streaked
      • black
  3. Broad Beans are sub categorized by the number of beans in the pod:
    • longpod broad beans: 8 beans in the pod, at least traditionally
    • windsors broad beans: 4 beans in the pod
    • modernbroad beans: 5-7 beans per pod
      • produce shorter plants
      • their beans are more tender
    • there are also dwarf broad beans that are great for container growing
  4. Lima Beans
    • also known as butter beans
    • flat pods with beans that are large, green or white
    • tropical plants that require warm soil temperatures for germinating and grow best in areas with hot summers and full sun
    • follow the growing recommendations for french beans or runner beans
    • sub-classifications based on growth habit:
      • dwarf
      • pole beans (or climbers)
  5. Black-eyed Peas
    • aka: black-eyed beans, southern peas, crowder peas, cowpeas, field peas
    • originally from Africa; grown world-wide today
  6. Yardlong Beans
    • can grow up to 3 feet long, but it’s better to pick them before they get longer than 2 feet
    • also known as asparagus beans or Chinese long beans
    • can be eaten fresh or cooked, just like french beans
  7. Soybeans
    • grown like french beans
    • they produce short green pods covered with downy hairs
    • originated in Southeast Asia, but now grown worldwide
    • Dried, soybeans can be used just like any other dried beans
    • fresh pods can be boiled or steamed

Varieties to Grow

Growth Requirements for Beans

Climate & Temperature Requirements

Air Temperature

Soil Temperature

Humidity

Day Length or Light Requirements

Site Conditions Favored

Soil Requirements

Soil Texture

pH

Nutrient Requirements

Propagation

Methods of propagation

Seed

Division

Cuttings

Transplanting or Potting Up

Seed Saving

Planting Out

Bed Prep & Soil Amendments

Bed Spacing

Row Spacing

Planting Depth

Alternative Bed Methods

Routine Cultivation & Maintenance

Water Requirements

Fertilization Recommendations

Mulching & Weeding

Pinching or Pruning & Dividing

Support

Winterizing

Companion Planting

Helpful Companions

Harmful Companions

Companion to..

Pests, Diseases & Problems

Common Pests

Common Diseases

Symptoms

Whole Plant

Leaves

Stem/Trunk

Flowers

Fruit

Roots

Harvesting & Storage

Edible Parts of the Plant

Yield

Days to Harvest / Harvest Timing

When to Harvest

Harvest Methods

Storage of harvest

Fresh

Canned

Frozen

Pickled

Dried

Cooking Beans

Nutritional Benefits & Values

Toxicity

Cooking

Preparation

Cooking Methods

Recipes (link to …/category/recipes/tag/Beans)

Resources

Information for this article was taken from these sources. (link to …/category/resources/tag/Beans)

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