Gardening tips, gardening info and heaps of ideas to help gardeners of all experience get more out of their hobby and out of their gardens.
"You mean there's a HARD way to grow broad beans?" I can feel you chortling already but you can mock away, if something is too simple then there is always the fringe element who like to make it harder than it needs to be.
In fact, growing broad beans, or fava beans as they're commonly known, is as easy as popping a seed in the ground, watering it, and then picking the produce once they're ripe. That's it. End of story.
Yet, if that were the entire post on how to grow broad beans you can bet the comments to swell asking for all kinds of further information and advice. Queries would range from "I'm getting a lot of flowers but no beans" to "How do you know when they're ripe?" or even "How should I cultivate the soil before I plant the bean seeds?" The answer: see above.
To grow broad beans successfully they require 5 simple things; a growing medium, water, sun, support and a little patience - in that order.
If you have soils that really need some serious amending then growing a few crops of broad beans will certainly assist the process for you.
As for the patience, growing broad beans will test yours. Most legumes germinate quickly, grow to their full height and produce mature fruit quite quickly. Not so with broad beans. Every part of their growing cycle seems to be naturally slowed to a snail's pace. But, if you're willing to just let them do their "thing" they will succeed in the end.
Once the broad bean plant starts growing past germination it's quite quick that their flowers will start to bloom in readiness for pollination. However, it can seem like months before any of those flowers start to produce bean seeds. Then, its another few weeks before they grow large enough and their shell begins to harden off somewhat before they're ready to be picked.
But the best part of growing broad beans is that you can save a few, dry them out and then replant for next year's harvest. They truly are one of the easiest beans to grow in your garden.
Comments
Broad beans are called "gourganes" in French Canada and are the basis of a traditional soup that my husband loves. So thanks for the tips, Stuart. We'll be trying a few of these in our allotment next year.
Posted by: Helen at Toronto Gardens | October 21, 2009 9:15 AM
Gourganes? I've never heard that term before. Ta for sharing Helen.
When I was cooking, the French term we used for broad beans was "Fèves". Interesting, isn't it.
Posted by: Stuart | October 21, 2009 10:03 AM
Definitely called broad beans in England. We grow them every year with varying rates of success, usually setting them at the end of winter,February, to crop in June/July. This year we're setting them now and hoping to get a slightly earlier crop.
Posted by: mary mayfield | October 21, 2009 4:17 PM