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| Vegging Out Hints, tips and queries about your vegetable crop |
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| Piskie, I've grown the sutton last year and ended up putting stakes in because the plants can crop heavily, they become heavy and can topple over easily. It depends how many beans each plant has on it and whether you live in an exposed area =] |
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| Hi, There is no need to stake them over winter, they should only be a few inches high. They can certainly get black legs from wind-rock on an exposed site. I have found that if you don't plant them too early (only after late Oct)they don't put on lots of lush top growth before the bad weather. When they start to shoot in early spring I use a similar meathod to Tony as I grow them in blocks- this also helps as the support one another.
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| If you grow them on the open plot they shouldn't need staking. If you grow them under cloches they can get a bit leggy and floppy. I never stake broad beans individually, but put canes/posts at intervals down the rows and run string between to support the whole lot. Sutton is quite dwarf and I've never had to use stakes for that variety. |
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