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What could you make or do to make sure your bean plants stay upright and don’t fall down?

User Mehrtash
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2 Answers

4 votes
Seedlings fail to emerge. Several possible causes: (1) Beans are a warm weather crop and seed may rot in soil less than 50° to 60° F. Delay planting until the soil has warmed; (2) Soil is heavy or crusted; seedlings may not be able to push through. Add aged compost to the planting bed; cover seed with light compost mulch; (3) Seed was sown too deep or not deep enough. Beans planted in spring 2 inches deep or more may rot and fail to germinate. Beans planted at the end of spring or in summer may dry out and die if sown less than 1 inch deep. Plant beans about 1 inch deep in early spring; 2 inches deep later in the season
User Joe Riggs
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4.0k points
2 votes

Answer:

I got this off of g o o g l e

Step-by-step explanation:

I put pairs of small fence posts (one on each side) down the row. I then tied twine to the fence post and ran it on either side of the plants. This keeps them from falling over to the side. If you plant thick enough they won't fall to the front or back.

User Batanichek
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