This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.
Beans are a popular choice for
home gardens.
Specialists
at the University of Illinois Extension say bush beans need the least work. The
plants do not need supports to stand.
Green
bush beans used to be called string beans because of fibers along the pods
containing the seeds. But plant breeding reduced the fibers, and now the beans
are known as snap beans. Fresh ones break with the pleasing sound of a snap.
Unlike bush beans, pole beans need supports to climb.
But they need less space because they twist around poles or sticks. Also, because
the plants are tall, a person can stand while harvesting the beans.
Beans should not be planted until all risk of freeze
has passed in the spring. Planting beans every two to four weeks until early
August will provide a continuous harvest.
Control
weeds growing around bean plants, but be careful not to harm the plants. Their
root systems are not very strong or deep.
Seeds
should be planted two and one-half centimeters deep. Make sure the soil is not
too wet or the seeds could develop poorly.
Bush beans should be planted five to ten
centimeters apart. Space the rows at least forty-five to sixty centimeters apart.
Plant pole beans ten to fifteen
centimeters apart along rows, and leave about eighty to ninety centimeters of
room between the rows. Or you could plant the beans along rows of hills with
four to six seeds per hill. The hills should be spaced about eighty centimeters
apart, and the rows should also be about eighty centimeters apart.
The
University of Illinois Extension service says you should harvest beans when the
pods are firm and have reached their full length. Do not wait until the seeds
inside are fully developed. Bean plants produce more beans if pods are
continually removed before the seeds are mature.
But wait until the plants are
completely dry before picking beans. Picking beans from wet plants can spread
bean bacterial blight, a disease that damages the plants.
Beans should be moved to different areas of the garden
each year. This is because diseases that infect beans can stay in the soil and
infect the next bean crop.
Not only are beans a healthy
food, they are also good for the soil. Other plants take nitrogen out of the
soil, but beans and other legumes replace it.
And that's the VOA Special
English Agriculture Report, written by Jerilyn Watson. For more advice for home
gardens, go to voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Bob Doughty.