Learn About Beans

Posted in: Beans
Learn About Beans

How To Sow    How To Grow   Tips   Common Pests    FAQ

How to Sow

  • Because beans are members of the legume family of plants, they can benefit from an application of a soil inoculant designed for beans and peas, prior to planting. The inoculant will enable the plants to take nitrogen from the air to use as fertilizer, which can increase crop yield and quality.
  • Sow in average soil in a sunny location after danger of frost and soil has warmed, from spring to early summer. Sow after the soil has warmed, as seeds may rot in cooler soils.
  • Coat untreated seed with an inoculant.
  • Sow in rows 24 inches apart. Sow seeds 3 inches apart and cover with 1 inch of fine soil. Firm lightly and water gently.
  • Seedlings emerge in 10-14 days depending on soil and weather conditions.
  • Keep sowing bush bean seeds every 2 weeks for a constant supply of beans.
  • Thin gradually to stand 6 inches apart when seedlings are 1-2 inches high.

How to Grow

  • In dry weather, keep soil well-watered. Plants need about 1 inch of rain per week during the growing season. Use a rain gauge to check to see if you need to add water. It’s best to water with a drip or trickle system that delivers water at low pressure at the soil level. If you water with overhead sprinklers, water early in the day so the foliage has time to dry off before evening, to minimize disease problems. Keep the soil moist but not saturated.
  • Cultivate or mulch to keep weed-free, but do not work or handle plants when leaves are wet.
  • Beans as companion plants: Planted closely in rows spaced around two feet, bush bean plants blend well with like-sized warm-season vegetables such as peppers, tomatoes and eggplants. Between towers of pole bean plants, planting vines such as squash can help keep weeds down. Pole beans can help protect cool-season vegetables such as spinach and lettuces, as the weather warms.

Harvest and Preserving Tips

  • For fresh use, pick pods as soon as well-filled out with peas
  • For dried bean use, harvest in about 80 days, when the pods start to dry on the plant.
  • To Dry Beans: Allow the beans to stay on the plants until they are partially dry. Then pull up the plants and hang them in a warm, dry place with good air circulation until the pods and seeds are thoroughly dry. Shell the beans and save the pods and plants for composting.

Common Disease Problems

Anthracnose: This is a fungus that causes brown sunken spots that enlarge into round black spots with pinkish centers. Seeds turn yellow with rusty brown spots. The disease spreads with slashing water and can overwinter in the soil. Burpee Recommends: Rotate crops with plants in a different family. Do not handle plants when wet. Do not compost infected plants.

Common Bean Mosaic Virus: This virus causes mottled yellowish foliage with leaves that curl downwards. The plants are stunted and yields are reduced. The disease can be spread by aphids. Burpee Recommends: Remove infected plants and discard. Control aphids. Grow resistant varieties.

Downy Mildew: This fungus causes whitish gray patches on the undersides and eventually both sides of the leaves. Burpee Recommends: Rotate crops with plants in a different family. Avoid overhead watering. Provide adequate air circulation, do not overcrowd plants. Do not work around plants when they are wet.

Powdery Mildew: This fungus disease occurs on the top of the leaves in humid weather conditions. The leaves appear to have a whitish or greyish surface and may curl. Burpee Recommends: Avoid powdery mildew by providing good air circulation for the plants by good spacing and pruning. Contact your Cooperative Extension Service for fungicide recommendations.

Root Rot: This fungus causes damping off in seedlings, and in older plants, the leaves turn yellow and drop off, stunting occurs, pods and seeds are small and roots are discolored. The fungus can live in the soil for five years. Burpee Recommends: Rotate crops with plants in a different family. Consider planting bush beans in containers.

Common Pest and Cultural Problems

Aphids: Greenish, red, black or peach colored sucking insects can spread disease as they feed on the undersides of leaves. They leave a sticky residue on foliage that attracts ants. Burpee Recommends: Introduce or attract natural predators into your garden such as lady beetles and wasps who feed on aphids. You can also wash them off with a strong spray, or use an insecticidal soap.

Bean Beetle and Mexican Bean Beetle: The white larvae bore into roots and can also damage stems. The adult beetles are reddish orange, ¼ inches ling with 3-4 black spots on their backs. They chew holes in leaves from the underside. Mexican bean beetles look like copper colored lady bugs. Burpee Recommends: Hand pick. Remove plant debris. Check with your local Cooperative Extension Service for pesticide recommendations.

Cutworms: These insects cut off the seedlings at the soil level. Burpee Recommends: Place a paper cup collar (use a coffee cup with the bottom cut out) around the base of the plant. They are usually mostly a problem with young seedlings. You can also control by handpicking and controlling weeds, where they lay their eggs.

Leafhoppers: Leafhoppers cause injury to leaves and stunt growth. They also spread disease. Burpee Recommends: Remove plant debris. Use insecticidal soaps. Consult your Cooperative Extension Service for other insecticide recommendations.

Japanese Beetles: Burpee Recommends: Hand pick early in the morning into a bucket of soapy water.

Beans FAQs

What are inoculants? Inoculants are dormant bacteria safe to use with beans. Beans, like peas, form a beneficial relationship with these bacteria commonly found in soil to capture nitrogen. Inoculants help beans planted in less than optimally warm or poor soils. New or heavily disturbed soils and soilless mixes need inoculants as they do not have a natural supply in the soil already.

Are your seed treated with inoculants or fungicides? We do not treat our seed with any products after harvest.

Why do I have no flowers on my plants? Too much fertilizer will make lots of leaves and no flowers OR pole beans take much longer to produce than bush beans. In the South, a pest called the Tarnished Plant Bug may inject a toxin into the plant that stops flower and pod production.

Why do my plants have flowers but no pods? Heat, moisture, and a nutrient deficiency (usually phosphorus and calcium) or too much nitrogen can cause flowers to abort.

Can I start my bean plants indoors? We do not recommend starting beans indoors. The plants roots are easily damaged when transplanting, and beans grow so quickly they do not need to be started early.

May 10, 2021
©2023 W.Atlee Burpee & Co