THIS IS AN ARCHIVE OF LAKE TAHOE NEWS, WHICH WAS OPERATIONAL FROM 2009-2018. IT IS FREELY AVAILABLE FOR RESEARCH. THE WEBSITE IS NO LONGER UPDATED WITH NEW ARTICLES.

Now is the time for fresh beans


image_pdfimage_print

By Russ Parsons, Los Angeles Times

Beans can seem complicated. They come in different colors — green, yellow and purple are the most common. And in different shapes — round and flat — and different sizes — yard-long and fingernail thin. They grow on different types of plants — pole beans climb to the sky while bush beans stay close to the ground.

But in the end, they all taste pretty much the same.

Thank goodness. Because beans, whatever the type, make terrific summer food.

Read the whole story

image_pdfimage_print

About author

This article was written by admin

Comments

Comments (4)
  1. old long skiis says - Posted: July 13, 2015

    Now is the time for fresh beanns. Now is the time to keep planting. Late in the year? Most definetly! Some things will remain dormant over winter(if we get a winter!) and will sprout next spring.
    So plant on my hardy LTN gardeners and be positive and keep putting seeds in the ground! OLS

  2. duke of prunes says - Posted: July 14, 2015

    Anyone have a potato box active? I’ve always wanted to make one. Greenhouse structures shouldn’t count towards coverage. If there is any hope to establish crop up here we need them. If it isn’t the wind, the hail will take out the plants.

  3. old long skiis says - Posted: July 14, 2015

    Duke, Potato box? An old freind gave me a small greenhouse but have not had much sucsess in growing there in tne little plastic greenhouse.
    Grow baby grow, OLS

  4. nature bats last says - Posted: July 14, 2015

    Ive heard success for growing potatoes in stacked up tires filled with soil and compost. Not sure about the tires (too toxic I would think) but maybe those erosion controll products filled with straw rolled up then filled with soil/compost. Scarlet runner beans are fun to grow, great for attracting humming birds and butterflies.