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Southern Pea Seeds - Dimpled Brown Crowder - Sow True Seed


243 Haywood St., Asheville, NC 28801

(828)-254-0708 | info@sowtrue.com

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Bush Bean Seeds - Maggie Flowers Six-Week Pink Bunch - Sow True Seed
Bush Bean Seeds - Maggie Flowers Six-Week Pink Bunch - Sow True Seed

Bush Bean Seeds - Maggie Flowers Six-Week Pink Bunch

$3.95

Sold out for 2025

Phaseolus vulgaris

HEIRLOOM. Maggie Flowers Six Week Pink Bunch beans can produce a crop of tender, delicious snap beans in just six weeks, even in cool spring weather. “Bunch” bean is Southern Appalachian for “bush bean," and these beans produce their early crop on convenient, compact plants.  Their namesake, Ms. Maggie Flowers of Burkesville, Kentucky remembers neighbors and family members growing these beans at least back to her grandparents' generation.  We're proud to offer this rare piece of Appalachian heritage to gardeners everywhere!

12 gram packet contains a minimum of 55 seeds.

SMALL FARM GROWN by the Appalachian Seed Growers Collective. A portion of proceeds from each packet benefits the Collective's efforts to increase seed production capacity in Southern Appalachia and breed varieties that thrive in our region.

Minimum Seeds per Packet: 55

Packet Weight: 12g

Planting Season: After Last Frost

Sowing Method: Direct Seed

Seed Depth: 1"

Direct Seed Spacing: 1-3"

Soil Temperature: 60-80 ℉

Days to Sprout: 7-14

Mature Spacing: 3-4"

Sun Requirement: Full Sun

Frost Tolerance: Frost Sensitive

Days to Harvest: 42

When to Seed Bush Beans 

Bush beans are a fast-maturing, frost sensitive crop that should be directly seeded into the garden after all danger of frost has passed. 

Where to Plant Bush Beans

Bush beans will want a spot with full sun and loose, well-draining soil. They’ll love a spot rich in organic matter, but too much nitrogen can cause plants to produce more leaves than flowers or pods. 

Growing Bush Beans

Plant bush beans one inch deep and one to three inches apart, in rows one to two feet apart. Once germinated, they can be thinned to their mature planting distance of three to four inches. Assuming your soil is high quality with well-aged organic matter, you shouldn’t have to apply any kind of fertilizer. Something that can be helpful is to use a legume inoculant. This ensures that legumes will have all of the symbiotic microbes they need. Typically, these microbes are already found in the soil but can be in low numbers if your garden is depleted or has recently been converted from a lawn. Make sure your beans get at least one inch of water per week.

Harvesting Bush Beans

Bush beans are known for maturing all at once (within a few weeks of each other), rather than pole beans that produce continuously. Plant bush beans in successions every two weeks for a continuous harvest. Pick bush beans regularly, when the pods have reached full length but the beans inside have not formed. Regular picking will encourage more production.

Common beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) including bush beans and pole beans typically self-pollinate and only need to be isolated by about 20 feet from other bean varieties in order to save pure seed. Note: favas, runner beans, and asparagus beans are not the same species, and require more isolation distance.

To collect viable bean seeds, wait to harvest until the pods turn brown on the plants. In dry climates, beans can be left to dry completely on the plants, but if you live in an area with high humidity or a lot of rain during the late summer and fall when beans are maturing, it’s a good idea to bring the mature pods indoors to finish drying on screens or spread out in a single layer on newsprint. Most gardeners shell their saved beans out of the pods by hand, though they can also be threshed and winnowed in large batches. Make sure your beans have completely dried down before storing them in sealed containers in a dark, dry, and cool location.

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Bush Bean Seeds - Maggie Flowers Six-Week Pink Bunch

$3.95

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