September 10
Thanks to my trusty assistant, Emil, we have photos to document the bean development in my absence. These pictures for September 10 show quite a few more yellow leaves than our last photos of the field, but the fact that there were so many leaves visible means harvest is still weeks away. Another sign of development was the coloring of the pods that were mostly brown instead of mostly green as they've been until these photos were taken.
September 18
Many more leaves had fallen by the time this photo was taken on September 18, but there was still enough green vegetation in the field to indicate that harvest was not imminent. One can see a distinctive trait of mature beans in this photo: the nearly straight stalks with clearly visible pods, and a noticeable absence of leaves. This phase in bean development always amazes me, that what looked like a bushy plant a few weeks ago can look like such a straight stick at this phase.
September 23
The beans appear nearly ready for harvest in these photos from September 23. I believe any green leaves in these photos actually belong to weeds in the field, and not bean stalks. The stick-like appearance of the stalks is evident again in this photo, and the stalks have clearly reached the R8, full maturity stage.
Even though we've had a pretty severe drought this summer, Farmer Wagenbach appears to have been blessed with beans that have a fair number of pods and seeds. About the only thing that would reduce the harvest at this point would be storm damage that might make harvest difficult.
I couldn't let "Beans in the backyard" fall to the wayside! After all, we wouldn't want your readers to miss out!
ReplyDeleteGlad to help!