Anyhow, I've learnt from previous all too frequent mistakes and really gone to town on my runner bean fence this season. Two stout 2"x2" tanalised timbers have been inserted into some metal box section that has been driven into the ground. Washing line has been stretched horizontally across top and bottom and green polypropylene string vertically between these. The whole support structure leans at an angle of about 25degrees from the vertical so that any developing beans hang down away from the foliage which can cause them to distort and go bendy.
6 plants have been planted into ground that was well prepared over winter with a trench dug and some manure put into the bottom. More seeds have been sown in situ. Don't forget to scatter some slug pellets. Or fox pellets if the murdering brown bastards are a problem in your area.
I'm growing a variety called Blyton Sabre again after growing it last year and getting some superb beans before the whole fence collapsed when I got swine flu at a critical time and I was too ill to get things back on track. I think you will all remember how I valiantly fought back from near certain death. What a superhuman effort that was!
2 comments:
I am trying a variety this year called St George which has apparently been hugely commended by the RHS for its productivity, but to be on the safe side I am also growing the tried and tested favourite "Enorma", both of which I shall probably enter in our local show.
I am fascinated by the idea of angling the growing frame to avoid the foliage. Sounds an excellent idea.
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