Field Beans (Phaseolus vulgaris): The Protein Partner
layout: base.njk title: Field Beans description: Growing Field Beans in West Virginia (Zone 6b/7a) category: legume
For: The Loop Farmstead, New Martinsville WV 26155
Zone: 6b/7a
Soil: Heavy clay
Understanding Field Beans
Dry Beans vs. Snap Beans
Dry Beans (Field Beans): - Grown for dried seeds (not pods) - Left on plant until pods dry - Shelled, dried, stored - Uses: Soups, stews, refried beans, etc. - Storage: Years in proper conditions
Snap Beans (Green Beans): - Grown for fresh pods - Eaten when pods are young and tender - Already covered in warm season vegetables - Not for long-term storage
For The Loop Farmstead: This guide covers DRY beans—for storage and winter food. Grow snap beans for fresh eating, but grow dry beans for food sovereignty.
Growth Habits
Bush Beans: - Compact plants (1-2 feet tall) - No support needed - Produce all at once (good for mechanical harvest) - Shorter season (50-65 days)
Pole Beans: - Tall, vining plants (6-8 feet) - Require support (poles, trellis) - Produce over longer period - Longer season (65-85 days) - Higher yield per square foot
Half-Runner Beans: - Intermediate (3-5 feet) - Can be grown with or without support - Traditional Appalachian type - Dual-purpose (snap + dry)
For The Loop Farmstead: - Pole beans: Best yield per square foot (important for limited space) - Bush beans: Easier for large-scale planting, no trellising - Half-runners: Appalachian heritage, versatile
Plant all three types for diversity and staggered harvest.
2. Light Red Kidney
Type: Bush Dry Bean
Days to Maturity: 90-100 days
Source: Regional suppliers, farm supply
Characteristics: Lighter red color, slightly smaller than dark red kidney
Uses: Same as dark red kidney
Why Grow It: Light red kidney beans are similar to dark red but with lighter color and slightly different texture. Some cooks prefer them for specific dishes. Grow both for diversity.
Pinto Beans
4. Pinto
Type: Bush Dry Bean
Days to Maturity: 90-100 days
Source: Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds, Seed Savers Exchange, most suppliers
Characteristics: Beige with brown speckles (turns solid brown when cooked), classic pinto flavor
Uses: Refried beans, burritos, soups
Why Grow It: Pinto is THE bean of the Southwest and Mexico. It's the most consumed bean in America. The flavor is classic, versatile, and beloved. Every homestead should grow pintos.
Clay Soil Performance: Very good.
For The Loop Farmstead: Essential variety. Plant significant space (200+ sq ft for family of 4).
Navy Beans
6. Navy (Pea Bean)
Type: Bush Dry Bean
Days to Maturity: 85-95 days
Source: Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds, Seed Savers Exchange
Characteristics: Small white beans, classic navy bean shape
Uses: Baked beans, navy bean soup, military rations (historical)
Why Grow It: Navy beans are the classic baked bean. They're small, white, and cook into creamy perfection. The name comes from their use by the US Navy in the 1800s. They're a heritage staple.
Clay Soil Performance: Good.
Black Beans
8. Black Turtle Soup
Type: Bush Dry Bean
Days to Maturity: 90-100 days
Source: Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds, Seed Savers Exchange
Characteristics: Small black beans, shiny, dense texture
Uses: Black bean soup, Latin American dishes, rice and beans
Why Grow It: Black Turtle Soup is the classic black bean. It's essential for Latin American cooking. The beans are small, shiny, and hold their shape well. Every homestead should grow black beans.
Clay Soil Performance: Very good.
For The Loop Farmstead: Essential variety. Plant alongside pintos and kidney beans.
Half-Runner Beans (Appalachian Heritage)
10. Half-Runner (Appalachian)
Type: Half-Runner Dry Bean
Days to Maturity: 75-85 days
Source: Southern Exposure Seed Exchange, Seed Savers Exchange, local Appalachian sources
Characteristics: 3-5 feet tall, can be grown as snap or dry bean, traditional Appalachian variety
Uses: Snap beans (young), dry beans (mature), fried beans (traditional)
Why Grow It: Half-runner beans are Appalachian heritage. They're called "half-runners" because they're between bush and pole types—taller than bush, shorter than pole. Traditionally grown on corn stalks (Three Sisters). Can be eaten as snap beans or dried. This is the bean your great-grandparents grew.
Clay Soil Performance: Excellent. Adapted to Appalachian soils including clay.
For The Loop Farmstead: This is heritage agriculture. Plant half-runners alongside corn (Three Sisters). It's the most culturally appropriate bean for The Loop Farmstead.
12. Dixie Speckled Blackeye (Half-Runner Type)
Type: Half-Runner Cowpea/Bean
Days to Maturity: 85-95 days
Source: Southern Exposure Seed Exchange
Characteristics: Speckled beans with black eye, half-runner habit
Uses: Snap, dry, or fresh shell
Why Grow It: This is a Southern Appalachian specialty. It's technically a cowpea but grown like a half-runner. The flavor is distinctive. It's regional heritage.
14. Scarlet Runner
Type: Pole Dry Bean
Days to Maturity: 85-95 days
Source: Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds, Seed Savers Exchange
Characteristics: Red flowers, large beans, ornamental + edible, perennial in tropics
Uses: Young pods (snap), mature seeds (dry), flowers (edible)
Why Grow It: Scarlet Runner is stunning—brilliant red flowers attract hummingbirds. The beans are edible (large, speckled). It's ornamental and productive. Children love growing it. In Appalachia, it's traditionally grown on arbors.
Clay Soil Performance: Good.
Note: Scarlet Runner beans can be toxic if eaten raw or undercooked. Always cook thoroughly.
Growing Field Beans on Clay Soil
Site Preparation
Timing: - Plant: After last frost, when soil is warm (May in West Virginia) - Soil temp: 60°F+ at planting depth - Beans rot in cold, wet soil—wait for warmth
Preparation: 1. Clear residue from previous crop 2. Lightly till or rake 3. Add compost if soil needs building 4. Beans fix their own nitrogen (don't need N fertilizer)
Bean's Advantage: Beans fix atmospheric nitrogen through rhizobia bacteria in root nodules. This means: - No nitrogen fertilizer needed - Beans IMPROVE soil for subsequent crops - Perfect rotation partner after heavy feeders (corn)
Planting
Seed Rate: - Bush beans: 2-3 lbs per 1000 sq ft - Pole beans: 1-2 lbs per 1000 sq ft (fewer plants, more yield per plant) - Small scale: 1 bean seed per 4-6" (bush), 1 per 12" (pole)
Spacing: - Bush beans: 4-6" apart, rows 18-24" apart - Pole beans: 6-12" apart, rows 30-36" apart (need space for trellis) - Half-runners: 6" apart, rows 24-30" apart
Depth: - Plant 1-1.5" deep - Deeper in clay (1.5") for moisture
Method: 1. Plant seeds directly (beans don't transplant well) 2. Cover with soil 3. Water if dry 4. Germination: 7-14 days
Clay-Specific Notes: - Wait for soil to warm (clay stays cold longer) - Don't plant in wet clay (creates compaction) - Ensure good drainage (beans rot in waterlogged soil) - Raised beds work well for beans in heavy clay
Growing Season
Timeline: - May: Planting - Weeks 1-2: Germination - Weeks 3-6: Vegetative growth - Weeks 6-8: Flowering - Weeks 8-12: Pod development, seed maturation - Weeks 12-14: Harvest (dry beans)
Characteristics: - Beans are warm-season crops - Drought-tolerant once established - Don't over-water (encourages disease) - Flowers are self-pollinating (no pollinator dependency)
Fertility
Critical: Beans fix their own nitrogen. Don't add nitrogen fertilizer—it reduces nitrogen fixation.
What Beans Need: - Phosphorus: Important for nitrogen fixation and root development - Potassium: Adequate in clay soils - pH: 6.0-6.8 (slightly acidic to neutral) - Inoculant: Rhizobia bacteria (helps nitrogen fixation)
Inoculant: - Powder containing nitrogen-fixing bacteria - Apply to seeds before planting - Especially important in new gardens - Available at garden stores
Organic Approach: - Use bean inoculant - Add bone meal if soil is P-deficient - Compost is beneficial (but not high-nitrogen compost) - Beans improve soil for next crop
Water Needs
- Germination: Consistent moisture
- Establishment: Regular watering
- Flowering/pod set: Critical period—don't let plants dry out
- After pod set: Reduce watering (encourages drying)
For West Virginia: Typical rainfall is usually sufficient. Irrigate during flowering if drought occurs.
Storage
Requirements: - Fully dry (beans should shatter, not bend) - Airtight containers (glass jars, food-grade buckets) - Cool, dry place - Oxygen absorbers (optional, extends storage)
Duration: - 2-3 years minimum - 5+ years in optimal conditions - Gradual loss of cooking quality over time
Pest Prevention: - Freeze beans for 1 week before storage (kills weevil eggs) - Use airtight containers - Add bay leaves (traditional method—may deter pests) - Check periodically for weevils
Beans in Crop Rotation
Perfect Rotation Partner: - Year 1: Corn (heavy feeder) - Year 2: Beans (nitrogen fixer) - Year 3: Wheat or other grain - Year 4: Back to corn
Three Sisters: - Corn + beans + squash together - Corn provides structure for beans - Beans fix nitrogen for corn - Squash shades soil (moisture, weed suppression) - Complete nutritional system
After Heavy Feeders: - Plant beans after corn, squash, tomatoes - Beans replenish nitrogen - Improves soil for subsequent crops
The Three Sisters: Corn, Beans, Squash
The Three Sisters is Indigenous agricultural wisdom:
How It Works: 1. Plant corn first (in hills/mounds) 2. When corn is 6" tall, plant beans around corn 3. When beans sprout, plant squash between hills
Benefits: - Corn: Structure for beans to climb - Beans: Nitrogen for corn - Squash: Shade, moisture retention, weed suppression - Together: Complete nutrition (corn + beans = complete protein, squash = vitamins)
For West Virginia Clay: - Plant on mounds (improves drainage) - Use half-runner or pole beans - Space hills 4' apart - This is the original sustainable agriculture
For The Loop Farmstead: The Three Sisters is perfect for your farm. It's Indigenous wisdom, it's productive, and it's culturally appropriate. Plant Three Sisters hills alongside single-crop plantings.
Added to WV Planting Guide 26155 — The Loop Farmstead