Last year I grew Nectargold, which is a yellow climbing french bean. I sowed them in pots indoors in mid May and planted out 3 plants in early June. Beans were ready to eat towards the end of July, but I preferred the runners and most of these got left on the plant until the pods dried. I picked 2 carrier bags full of pods for my friend in early September.
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Climbing beans up North
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Originally posted by match View PostJust looked these up and apparently it's another name for 'Lazy Housewife' beans which we have tried twice, and both times they only started flowering in mid-September, and were later than other beans we grew.
What do the seeds of the "Lazy Housewife" you grow look like? Are they a fairly normal bean-shape?
If they are, they are not Coco blanc a rames. These beans are very round, almost pea-shaped.
Originally posted by Scarlet View PostBut last year we had exceptional hot weather? It was also amazing for tomatoes and chillies.
Although admittedly up north, "too hot" would probably be harder to achieve.
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Runner beans are the ones that sulk in hot weather - and aren't pollinated when the weather is too cold for the bees to fly.
French beans are less demanding than runners.
I have both Coco blanc a rames and Lazy Housewife seeds - although I haven't looked for them to compare. I wonder whether the seed companies are using "Lazy Housewife" as a description - a bean that doesn't need stringing, not saying that the 2 beans are the same variety - (I don't think they are).
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Originally posted by veggiechicken View PostRunner beans are the ones that sulk in hot weather - and aren't pollinated when the weather is too cold for the bees to fly.
French beans are less demanding than runners.
I have both Coco blanc a rames and Lazy Housewife seeds - although I haven't looked for them to compare. I wonder whether the seed companies are using "Lazy Housewife" as a description - a bean that doesn't need stringing, not saying that the 2 beans are the same variety - (I don't think they are).
As for hot weather, it's true that runner beans sulk more in hot weather, but even French beans do if it's hot enough. One of my wigwams did really poorly most of last summer because it was so damn hot. But the other wigwam, in partial shade, did much better.
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The hot weather last year helped to dry them. I don't water so my beans were a disaster last year.
My lazy house wife beans are white and round - I always thought they were called lazy because they aren't very tall. No more than 4 /5 foot.
http://www.realseeds.co.uk/beans.htmlLast edited by Scarlet; 13-10-2019, 06:31 AM.
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I water with water butts ( I have 2 on each GH and shed and a few on the house)...if they run dry then that's it. I'm on a water meter. It's just too expensive - I use the hose for my two green houses and also new plants because we don't get that much rain. I watered in my new hedge this year which took forever.
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Originally posted by veggiechicken View PostI have both Coco blanc a rames and Lazy Housewife seeds - although I haven't looked for them to compare. I wonder whether the seed companies are using "Lazy Housewife" as a description - a bean that doesn't need stringing, not saying that the 2 beans are the same variety - (I don't think they are).
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