Beginning Gardening? Want to know how beans grow?
If you’ve ever walked by containers of bulk seed in a garden store, you may have been surprised by the many different colors, sizes and shapes of the beans — even by the variety of designs on the seed coats and their descriptive names: ‘Soldier’, ‘Wren’s Egg’, ‘Yellow Eye’, ‘Black Eye’, and others.
Maybe you were impressed, too, with how big some of these seeds are. Underneath the large, hard seed coat is an embryo, a tiny plant ready to spring to life. When you plant a bean seed, the right amount of water, oxygen and a warm temperature (65oF to 75oF) will help it break through its seed coat and push its way up through the soil.
The Seed of Life
Most of the energy the young plant needs is stored within the seed. In fact, there’s enough food to nourish bean plants until the first true leaves appear without using any fertilizer at all.
As the tender, young beans come up, they must push pairs of folded seed leaves (or cotyledons) through the soil and spread them above the ground. Beans also quickly send down a tap root, the first of a network of roots that will anchor the plants as they grow. Most of the roots are in the top eight inches of soil, and many are quite close to the surface.
What Beans Need
Beans need plenty of sunlight to develop properly. If the plants are shaded for an extended part of the day, they’ll be tall and weak. They’ll be forced to stretch upward for more light, and they won’t have the energy to produce as many beans.
The bean plant produces nice, showy flowers, and within each one is everything that’s necessary for pollination, fertilization and beans. Pollination of bean flowers doesn’t require much outside assistance — a bit of wind, the occasional visit from a bee, and the job is done. After fertilization occurs, the slender bean pods emerge and quickly expand. Once this happens, the harvest isn’t far off.
Although beans love sun, too much heat reduces production. Bean plants, like all other vegetables, have a temperature range that suits them best: They prefer 70oF to 80oF after germinating. When the daytime temperature is consistently over 85oF, most beans tend to lose their blossoms. That’s why many types of beans don’t thrive in the South or Southwest in the middle of the summer — it’s simply too hot.
Beans don’t take to cold weather very well, either. Only Broad or Fava beans can take any frost at all. Other types must be planted when the danger of frost has passed and the soil has warmed up.
By: the Editors of National Gardening

Posted under Vegetable Garden Planting
This post was written by admin on March 27, 2009







Great site! This is the sort of thing I have been looking for. Some valuablegardening tips here. Thanks! Your site is great by the way. You should add buttons to the bottom of your posts to digg, stumble, etc your content.- Tom
Thanks now I have an idea on how to make my beans grow faster.
planting beans needs extra care to produce good variety. Thanks to the child I enjoy watching here planting and harvesting her beans.
beans are one of the best plants to grow in your garden because they help to restore nitrogen back to the soil. Very useful article and video.
There’s nothing like nice nutritious green beans
.-= Autohjælp´s last blog ..Sammenlign dansk autohjælp og vejhjælp =-.
Interesting and useful blog for biologists. Having watched this video I remembered myself as I was a child and liked to spend much time in the soil, planting different beans and flowers.