runner beans as perennials?

General tips / questions on seeding & planting

Moderators: KG Steve, Chantal, Tigger, peter

Nature's Babe
KG Regular
Posts: 2468
Joined: Tue Nov 03, 2009 6:02 pm
Location: East Sussex

This year after harvesting the runner beans I intend trying an experiment.
I remembered when I used to dig being surprised by the huge tubers they produced, and so looked it up and they are indeed perennial though usually treated as annuals. As I mulch well with straw and grass clippings I have decided to try and overwinter them with a thick mulch and see what happens. Wondering if anyone else has tried this?
Sit down before a fact as a little child, be prepared to give up every preconcieved notion, follow humbly wherever and to whatever abyss nature leads, or you shall learn nothing.
By Thomas Huxley
http://www.wildrye.info/reserve/
User avatar
alan refail
KG Regular
Posts: 7254
Joined: Sun Nov 27, 2005 7:00 am
Location: Chwilog Gogledd Orllewin Cymru Northwest Wales
Been thanked: 7 times

Have a read at this thread from last year

viewtopic.php?f=3&t=7622
Nature's Babe
KG Regular
Posts: 2468
Joined: Tue Nov 03, 2009 6:02 pm
Location: East Sussex

LOL Thanks Alan, just a thought ! Obviously they don't transplant very well and frost could be a problem. Like Plumpudding I have a rogue plant growing in my potatoes this year, a turks turban squash , it made its way through the potato bed and romped over the rhubarb and into the strawberry bed! A seed from the compost that found it's niche in the garden, lots of squash growing too !
Sit down before a fact as a little child, be prepared to give up every preconcieved notion, follow humbly wherever and to whatever abyss nature leads, or you shall learn nothing.
By Thomas Huxley
http://www.wildrye.info/reserve/
User avatar
John Yeoman
KG Regular
Posts: 38
Joined: Fri Aug 20, 2010 4:34 pm
Location: Herts, UK
Contact:

A friend has had great success in over-wintering runner beans. She does it to save rare heirloom varieties, especially if she has only a little seed left. She grows the root ball in nylon hair nets then, in autumn, lifts the nets into a pail of damp sand and keeps them above freezing in her garage in a covered bucket.

She says, it works.

A word of warning: never eat the roots of runner beans. (Easily done.) They are fiercely hallucinogenic.
The Gardening Guild, the centre for natural gardening ideas. http://www.gardeningguild.org/help
Nature's Babe
KG Regular
Posts: 2468
Joined: Tue Nov 03, 2009 6:02 pm
Location: East Sussex

Thank you John, might give it a try with next years beans maybe an earlier crop too? Though hair nets are hard to come by these days, lol.
Sit down before a fact as a little child, be prepared to give up every preconcieved notion, follow humbly wherever and to whatever abyss nature leads, or you shall learn nothing.
By Thomas Huxley
http://www.wildrye.info/reserve/
Post Reply Previous topicNext topic