£2.90
22 in stock
This Welsh adapted variety is sweet and tender when young and a delight to snack on in the garden. It is great raw in salads and when the beans are larger they are lovely steamed or stir fried. When the beans start to form they are lovely cooked like a haricot verre and the beans also dry well for use as winter pulses which have a nutty flavour. A great all-rounder.
These are vigorous plants which need strong supports as they will grow up to 3m tall.
Seed Story: I was given these seeds over 25 years ago after I was chatting to another gardener at an apple pressing day. We were discussing the best ever climbing French bean and we both said that we grew the best. She sent me some seeds through the post and I grew them the next year and do you know – she was right! These are fantastic beans and I have been selecting the best of them to save seeds from every year for the last 25 yrs, slowly adapting them to the Welsh climate.
Approx. 60 seeds per pack.
Botanical name: Phaseolus vularis
Sow the seeds in modules or small pots late April or mid-May. Harden off and plant out with strong tall supports as these are tall beans. Can be sown direct in mid-May if you are not troubled by rodents.
Because drying beans take longer to fully mature on the plant, they’re best started off early, indoors in April. Sow them in modules with some seed compost and if there are mice around, cover them up before they germinate, as rodents love the seeds. Harden off the young seedlings, then plant them out about 6-8” apart once all risk of frost has passed and he soil is warming up. Dig in plenty of organic matter initially, and water regularly throughout the season. The beans will need a structure with canes or string to wind themselves around as they climb. Most will find their own way up, but if any get a bit ‘lost’ you can simply wind them up yourself to begin with. Make sure you wind them anti-clockwise though, otherwise they’ll just unwind themselves!