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Weekend Gardening: Grow Your Own Produce

So many benefits to vegetable gardening. Try growing your own beans and drying them!

By Julie Mathiasen

June is a fabulous month in the garden.

It's a great time for growing, harvesting, and eating your own fruits, berries or veggies.

In the warm sun that's typcial of June, zucchini is a handsome plant and grows well on the Coastside. It grows so well, that you might find a bag of it on your porch step from your neighbor.

Try interspersing veggies amongst your landscape plants like Swiss chard or broccoli planted next to your favorite perennial flowers. A few onions or leeks planted around the garden will come in handy and take very little space. Tuck in green beans (bush type) around the borders of your garden. 

Purple bush beans will add some beautiful contrast in the garden.

Beans are dependable and easy to grow. Here's how:

1) Prepare the planting bed by loosening the soil.

2) Add well aged compost and mix with the soil.

3) Plant the beans 4-5 inches apart. They don't have to be in rows!

4) Harvest green beans when they are young and tender, and use two hands when picking to keep from breaking the brittle plants. Most beans will produce a second or third flush of beans after the first one is picked. By harvesting your beans twice a week, it will keep your bean plants producing for a longer period of time.

5) Make a bean teepee and grow pole beans on it. Your kids can climb inside of the bean teepee and read under an arbor of beans and flowers. Since these bush beans or pole beans are annuals, you can plant another set of beans two to three weeks after your first crop to extend the season.

Dry soup type beans grow like the bush beans or pole beans, but the immature pods stay tender for only a few days as the plants hurry to produce mature seeds. Bean seeds are very easy to dry.

Allow dry beans to stay on the plants until the pods turn tan and the beans inside show good color. If damp weather sets in just when your beans should be drying, pull up the plants and hang them in a dry place until they are dry enough to shell and sort. Allow the beans to dry for about two weeks before placing them in air tight containers for storage.

You can also save beans for planting for next year. Select the biggest and best seeds for planting. Make sure they are dried thoroughly and store them in a small paper sack until next year. Storing seeds in plastic will sometimes cause them to mold.

Beans benefit from fertile soil with a slightly acid pH (between 6.0 and 6.5), but once they are up and growing, beans make most of the nitrogen they need.

There are many benefits to growing your own produce like beans, zucchini and swiss chard at home. It is economical. You can easily make it organic. Your veggies will most likely taste better if you pick it and eat it the same day, also giving you the highest percentage of nutrients. Gardening can be therapeutic and can provide exercise.

Happy gardening!

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Jon DeLong May 18, 2013 at 06:45 pm
With so many good Mexican restaurants in the area, why bother?
Cid May 17, 2013 at 06:14 pm
I enjoy an occasional Taco Bell, but in the same shopping center as Happy Taco with far better,Read More authentic LOCAL Mexican food! Nah! I do enjoy the Combo locations that have KFC & TACO BELL. (Face it, Americans like to have choices!). With no drive-through, perhaps it will be better than the average suburban stores along the El Camino. As for another chain restaurant in Half Moon Bay...What did you expect? Demographics will continue to dictate that we can still expect to keep our "Fast-Food-Free-Zone" between Linda Mar and HMB while "City Councils or Planning Departments in the Cities will attract them....for their tax base.
Dee May 15, 2013 at 08:07 pm
Seriously? Taco Bell? Next to New Leaf? How did this happen? Not happy about this addition and notRead More looking forward to seeing Taco Bell trash all over the place. Not sure about KFC ... we already have a fast food chicken place at Popeyes so we certainly don't need another. The high school students will probably frequent Taco Bell the most and keep it in business but I will not be going there that's for sure.
Carol Wexler May 18, 2013 at 02:42 pm
I would consider volunteering at the California State Parks but dogs are not allowed and I wouldRead More need to bring my dog.
pae May 18, 2013 at 11:22 pm
Misha, I understand where you're coming from, but that's what we don't want to do. One reason thatRead More all dog owners are being discriminated against is those few who don't follow the rules. It doesn't matter that there are bicyclists and horseback riders who don't follow rules, they're "OK," it's the dog owners who pay the price. We want an area where our dogs can exercise freely and legally, where we won't be bothered by people who are afraid of dogs or dislike them, and where they're not at risk from horses who spook. For those of us who live surrounded by Rancho land especially, we don't want to have to drive miles to a small, fenced lot with crowds of others seeking to exercise their dogs in the same small area. We're paying for this open space with our tax dollars, and we want to have access to it. There's plenty of room for everyone.
Misha Flores May 17, 2013 at 09:35 am
To be honest I would probably just let my dog run around without a leash anyway, except there's soRead More much darned poison oak around these hills. I don't want her to get contaminated and then I hug her and trouble ensues.
Anne Martin May 16, 2013 at 04:29 pm
I don't own a dog now but empathize with the dog owners who have been deprived of the right toRead More allow their dogs to run free in the national recreation area that we as taxpayers own. As a taxpayer, I want to know the rationale for this policy. If it is to protect horses from being frightened by dogs what is the basis for that? How many horses use the open space? It appears that dozens of people who have been able to enjoy walking with their dogs in the open space adjoining their neighborhood are now being grossly inconvenienced because some faceless bureaucrats are creating rules that may have no basis in reality.
Chris Vance March 23, 2013 at 03:00 pm
What are you doing with the excess Undaria pinnatifida that is found? Can we get some of it for ourRead More compost piles at the Pacifica Sanchez Library Garden?