Just this one baby bean is visible. Now who could be eating my beans? Slugs? Snails? Birds? Mice? Does anyone have any ideas?
Matron grows vegetables and fruit in a Hampshire garden. I've been growing veggies since I was knee high to a grasshopper. Some traditional varieties and old favourites as well as new ideas. I share my garden with my allotment assistant Daisy the Labrador. On Twitter as @MatronsVeggies
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ReplyDeletePerhaps the dry weather is causing the beans to drop?
Are your beans being pollinated? It seems odd in this weather, but that could be your problem.
ReplyDeleteUmm it looks as though the flowers haven't set 'fruit' rather than something actually eating them. I've had this happen before where the first flowers haven't actually produced beans.
ReplyDeleteI think the weather can affect this e.g if it's windy or particularly dry. I've read you can spray the flowers with water ('mist' style water rather than full-on hose type!) to help the plants produce beans.
Oh, I've just seen other people have already answered! But the blog didn't show them. Must be the problem I've read about on other people's sites.
ReplyDeleteI don't think they are being eaten - runners like cool wet Summers and french beans like hot dry ones. Grow both and you cover your bets. I would suggest an hour under the sprinkler every evening (for the beans, not you)!
ReplyDeleteSorry to hear about the beans, I need to check mine out now!
ReplyDeletetoo much sunshine can make them abort
ReplyDeleteoh, putting the beans to one side things are looking great. First tomatoes; wow ours are minisule!
ReplyDeleteWord verification is 'gruck' - I like that :)
Interesting replies. My beans have definitely not been lacking from water at the roots. They get oodles of hose and buckets each day because I know 'you cannont over water runner beans'. I have not been spraying the foliage and flowers at all, so maybe a light spray every day will aid pollination. Let's see...
ReplyDeleteI have exactly the same problem with my beans. It has been very windy of late, but they have been kept well watered. I have two batches in different locations in the garden and both are suffering from the same problem. I have been misting them in the evenings too. I'm pretty sure they are not being eaten as the flowers are still evident on the ground. So it does seem that they are just not setting, but why I have no idea, unless it was just caused by the wind. If the current flowers set, now that the wind has dropped, then I guess that will answer the question.
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