The past 2 years, I’ve been growing out some rare veggie seed varieties from William Woys Weaver (I call him W3), who has collected many rare seeds over the years. Last year for him I grew rare cowpeas but this year I chose beans. This is in addition to my regular tomatoes, zukes, winter squash, cauliflower, chard, beets radishes, cukes and peppers and different varieties of berries/grapes .Good thing I have a BIG garden!
W3 wants his growers to grow out seeds that are getting older to keep the varieties viable. He sent some seeds, you can’t even find online. So this year I’m growing Landreth’s bush bean, Six Nations bush bean, Early Mohawk bush bean, Rouge de Paris bush bean, Wild Pigeon semi-pole bean. All of theses are dry beans. I am also growing one cowpea, Big Red Zipper, a pole cowpea (think black eye peas as we call them in the US) which has long pods with 8-10 large red cow peas that are so beautiful.
The only seeds that did not germinate well was the Landreth’s bean, where only 6 plants germinated out of 30. The seed I received for Landreth’s bean was 6 years old, so it is getting up there in age so I won’t get a lot but he will get whatever I get in the end. This is a good lesson to start saving your seeds! I am also allowed to keep some of each variety as well if I want.
In addition, I am growing out my friend, Lava Ewersmeyer’s, Garrofon Pintat pole butter bean which hails from Spain and Buschbonne Cannolino Rosso bush bean from Germany-both are beautiful white with red splashes. Lava lives in Berlin and here in Santa Fe, enjoying duel citizenship. Lava also gave me seeds for the Lava Red pepper ( a Corno de Horno variety) and Ruthje cherry tomato, both are outstanding which I grow each year as well. Thanks Lava!
Growing new varieties of seeds I’ve never tried before keeps me interested in gardening and I am saving seed that might otherwise go extinct which is important. Hopefully some will be fantastic! I really like bean seeds as so many of them are really beautiful.
Oh and I am growing one green bean for fresh-eating-Emerite pole bean which is a gourmet french filet bean that you can get in the US. I just have to keep up on picking them as if you let them get bigger than a pencil width, the skins get woody. So I pick often when they are ready (which they are not yet).

Sounds fantastic!
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Would you like to try some seed for a Canna that seems to be an achira? I really do not know what achira is, and am getting to believe that no one else does either. I mean that it is so variable, and includes a variety of species and hybrids. Since all Canna are edible, I suppose that any of them that anyone chooses to grow as a vegetable could be achira. This particular Canna seems to be a straight species, such as Canna edulis, because it generates an abundance of true to type seed. The plump rhizomes are about two inches wide. The foliage is simple green with only a barely perceptible red edge, without variegation or bronzing. The pseudostems tend to lean outwardly from crowded colonies, but stand vertically where they get plenty of space and sunlight. The bright red bloom is composed of narrow or ribbony floral parts, rather than the big and bold floral parts of ornamental cultivars. Seed supposedly needs scarification, although I do not scarify them if I put them out during autumn or winter. If they get started this late in summer, they should probably be scarified though, so that they can start to grow sooner, and begin to develop a small rhizome prior to autumn.
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Hi Tony-
I will pass on the canna. It would be an annual here since it gets freezing in the winter but thanks!
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Okay; I sort of thought so, but was not certain, since I noticed Canna growing wild in Oklahoma.
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If you can get hold of it try Kew Blue. Heritage seed library have it sometimes. It’s the best bean!
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