The more pods you harvest, the more these plants will produce.
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Green Bean Care Must-Knows
Green beans are easy to grow from seed planted directly in the garden. One of the keys to a great bean crop is to wait until the night temperature regularly stays above 55° F before planting. Bean seeds germinate poorly if planted too early. Select a full sun planting site that has fertile, well-drained soil. Plant seeds 1 inch deep and 4 inches apart in rows 18–24 inches apart. Sow seeds every three weeks or so until the end of June to provide a long, continued harvest.
Commonly munched by rabbits and deer, protect bean plants with fencing if these garden invaders are a problem in your area. Few other pests and diseases threaten beans. Prevent disease in future years by planting beans in a different spot in the garden each year. This practice is called crop rotation and cuts down on disease proliferation.
Green Bean Harvest Tips
Harvest most green beans when pods are 6-8 inches long, before pods and seeds reach full size, 45-55 days after planting. Specialty bush beans called filet beans should be harvested when pods are only ¼ inch in diameter. Harvest shelling beans once seeds have reached full size, about 80 days after planting. Dried beans take approximately 100-120 days to reach maturity. Because dried pods may split open and drop beans to the ground, place a large pan or bucket under the plants when harvesting dried beans.
More Varieties of Green Beans
Green Beans, Snap Beans Overview
GENUS NAME | Phaseolus vulgaris |
COMMON NAME | Green Beans, Snap Beans |
PLANT TYPE | Vegetable |
LIGHT | Sun |
HEIGHT | 1 to 10 feet |
WIDTH | 1 to 4 feet |
PROPAGATION | Seed |
‘Jade’ bean
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‘Jade’ bean offers slender, deep green pods that remain tender and productive in the heat of summer.
‘Derby’ bean
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‘Derby’ bean produces tender, 7-inch-long pods that are easy to harvest. Plants resist disease well.
‘Blue Lake 274’ bean
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This cultivar is a bush type that produces 6-inch-long green pods on bushy plants.
‘Romano’ pole bean
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This selection forms a vigorous vine, which features pods that remain stringless even when large.
‘Royal Burgundy’ bean
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‘Royal Burgundy’ bean bears nutritious purple pods that turn green when cooked.
‘Roc d’Or’ snap bean
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This variety is a yellow-pod type that’s also called wax bean. ‘Roc d’Or’ bears 6-inch-long yellow pods 52 days after planting.
‘Scarlet Runner’ bean
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‘Scarlet Runner’ bean is named for its attractive orangy-red flowers produced on vining plants. It is a different species (Phaseolus coccineus) than snap beans. It’s most often grown for its ornamental value, but it also produces tasty shelling beans.
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