Click this link for a video on YouTube showing How to Prevent Blackfly
from Damaging your Beans.
Here is another link for information on blackfly control on broad beans.
Click this link for a video on YouTube showing How to Prevent Blackfly
from Damaging your Beans.
Here is another link for information on blackfly control on broad beans.
Gardeners often pinch out the tops of broad beans to curb black fly. We very rarely pinch out the tops. But if blackfly are a problem, the tips may be pinched out when the first pods are set.
To pinch out the tops:
* first select the top of the broad bean plant
* find broad bean top
* Hold the tip between finger and thumb
* pinch the tip so that it breaks away from the plant
Blackfly is a serious pest of broadbeans in the kitchen garden. A whole mass of shiny black insects cover the growing tips, flower buds and the underside of young leaves of the broad bean plant.
Keep a sharp look out for blackfly on spring-sown beans when they are in flower in June. One advantage of sowing broad beans in the autumn is that they tend to flower early, producing beans in May or June, before any blackfly appear.
Blackfly suck the sap from the broad bean plant causing stunted growth with curled, distorted leaves, and poor crop yields.
Discourage blackfly attack by pinching out the growing tips of the broad bean plants when they are in full flower. Some gardeners pinch out the tops when five flowers have formed, or when the first pods have set. Remember the pinched out tops may be cooked & eaten!
Blackfly control:
Contact insecticides work when they actually touch the blackfly. They have short persistence, so thorough treatment, especially of the underside of leaves, is necessary. Aphids protected by curled leaves are unlikely to be controlled.
Synthetic pesticides generally give a higher level of control. Always read the label for instructions on the use of the product and harvest intervals. The harvest interval is the period of time between spraying the crop and it being safe to eat.
Bean flowers are beautiful and so variable. These photos show french
bean, broad bean and scarlet runner bean flowers.
How to Prevent Blackfly from Damaging your Beans
Click this link for a video on YouTube showing How to Prevent Blackfly
from Damaging your Beans.
It is harvest time for the Medes Broad Beans
The broad bean variety Medes was sown on 13 April, and harvested 28
July, giving a sowing to harvest interval of 102 days. This interval
could be reduced to 90 days, if, when 4 clusters of flowers are showing,
the remaining flower spikes are removed. This will induce earlier crops.
But it will bring all the beans together – which may not be desirable
for a small family. It is often better for the harvest to be spread out.
Pinching the later flowers out will also reduce yield, but will help to
reduce blackfly
Medes is a highly productive variety, producing medium sized pods 15cm (6in) long.
Each Medes Broad Bean pod contains 5-6 white beans.
The Medes beans are particularly sweet and creamy. Medes are recommended
for freezing, and were the variety used by Birds Eye.
The time to harvest broad beans
is when the pods have swollen and the shape of the bean can be seen through the pod, as is the case for the variety, Medes, now.
We have just had the final lot of Broad Beans in the Vegetable Garden. They
have been marvellous.
The first lot of Broad Beans were sown in November. The third and final
planting was at the end of March which spread the harvest well.
Picking started on 26 June from those planted in November. So we have been harvesting
broad beans from the vegetable garden for 8 weeks. The French Beans are
now producing well, and make a pleasant change. At least French Beans do
not need podding and can be thrown straight into the pan.
The early broad beans, planted in November, have cropped heavily but are
now over, & will be replaced with runner beans.
The broad beans went into good soil with a good structure. Thanks to the
bed system, this soil has not been trodden on, because the plants can be
harvested from the paths alongside the beds. So no cultivation work is
necessary. There are no weeds, and therefore the soil need not be disturbed.
The soil is very wet from recent rains, and would easily loose its
structure if moved.
The broad beans will be cut off at soil level, and the runner beans will
be transplanted directly into the broad bean patch.
The bean row has a succession of beans, starting with broad beans planted in November, followed by two later plantings of broad beans, ending with runner beans and french beans.
The early broad beans are now over. The second planting of broad beans, Sutton, have suffered from Chocolate Spot.
They have not grown as tall as the first planting, but they have produced a reasonable amount of beans, and the pods have not been affected by the Chocolate Spot fungus.
The final planting of broad beans, Bunyards Exhibition & Masterpiece Green Long Pod, are taller and less branching than the early variety. They look clean, with little disease. The pods
are developing well.
The runner beans and french beans are streaking up the supports at the far end of the row, spiralling anticlockwise tightly around the pole.
Now the first lot of broad beans is finished, they will be replaced with more runner beans. So this patch will be double cropped with beans, broad beans at the start of the season, and runner beans to finish the season.
The early broad beans which were sown in November are ready to harvest.
The pods have swollen and the beans inside are properly formed, but
still really small and sweet.
It is always a balance between yield and sweet tenderness.
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