This Forum will close on Wednesday 27 March, 2024. Please refer to the announcement on the Discussions page for further detail.
Stringy runner beans
in Fruit & veg
My first post, please be gentle with me! I have grown vegetables in the garden this year for the first time. It has been fairly successful but all the runner beans are inedible because they are so stringy. Any advice gratefully received. Is it something I have done in the growing or have I picked the wrong seeds.... Thanks in advance.
0
Posts
Thank you for replying. The variety is Polestar and Instarted them off in a propogator and moved them out into growing bags containing compost late May. Could it be the quality of the compost?
Are they stringy all over, or is it just at the edges of the pods - I always trim off the edges of runner bean pods like on here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qsBghwRfoeY
Sorry if I'm teaching my grandma to suck eggs, but I've met plenty of people who've never used fresh runner beans.
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
I grow Polestar and find them reliable. Rarely stringy. But if you are trying to grow them in growbags, then this is probably the cause of your problem.
They need a good root run, with lots of organic matter dug into the soil. They are thirsty plants, so need a lot of moisture.
For the rest of this season, pick them small and young, before they can get stringy. Next year, plant them in a prepared bed, enriched with compost etc. and you will be rewarded with an embarrassment of beans! (My neighbours disappear when they see me on the horizon with yet another bag or three of runner beans
)
Many thanks for all the replies. Yes I have been trimming them, daughter of an old fashioned greengrocer!
It looks like I need to pick them early this year and prepare much better next.
Wise words Verdun.
How often do you water?
We have been watering twice a day