Over the years we've saved many different seeds and had great success. Off-hand, we've saved the following seeds: carrots, lettuce, cowpeas, squash, tomatoes, kale, spinach, dill, parsley, peppers, okra, etc. Funny thing is, we've never saved the simplest one. The seed we all learned to grow in Kindergarten by planting these in some dirt in a Dixie cup. Yep, green beans! This year we aimed to do that. We showed in an earlier post how we saved three varieties of snap beans: Contender, Italian Roma and Purple Teepee beans.
In the midst of the drought, we aimed to test germination of the saved seed. Let's see what happened.
We're already harvesting a few. In the basket below, the Purple Teepee beans are at the top (of course!), the Contenders are to the right and the Italian Romas (my favorites) are to the left.
Our goal each year is to have fresh picked green beans for Thanksgiving Dinner. Looks like this year we've achieved our goal. With our experiment being a success, I now know that I have enough seed saved so that I don't need to purchase green bean seeds for this spring. The only hard part in saving seed is having the discipline to save your seed and not eat it all!
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