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Old June 22, 2016   #91
Shrinkrap
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If San Francisco Bay area folks are still reading, I am in Solano County, and I have planted various favas in the fall for years. Maybe in November, with garlic, shallots, sugar snaps, ect, just before the fall rains. Takes longer to get to harvest; March or so, but almost no work.......until it's time to peel them.

I do have to support them.
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Old June 22, 2016   #92
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Has anybody grown favas in NC or SC? I assume I'd plant them around November,would that be about right?
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Old June 22, 2016   #93
Aerial
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Great tip, Shrinkrap. Thanks!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Shrinkrap View Post
If San Francisco Bay area folks are still reading, I am in Solano County, and I have planted various favas in the fall for years. Maybe in November, with garlic, shallots, sugar snaps, ect, just before the fall rains. Takes longer to get to harvest; March or so, but almost no work.......until it's time to peel them.

I do have to support them.
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Old June 23, 2016   #94
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I don't peel them!

Linda
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Old June 23, 2016   #95
Bodhi Peace
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Quote:
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Has anybody grown favas in NC or SC? I assume I'd plant them around November,would that be about right?
I thought you got snow. Wouldn't you plant in spring?
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Old June 24, 2016   #96
Tracydr
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Quote:
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I thought you got snow. Wouldn't you plant in spring?
I'm very south and only 120 miles from the coast. Mild climate,maybe a dusting of snow once a winter,very rare temperatures <20.
I think I'm actually zone 8. I think it was changed not long ago.
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Old June 24, 2016   #97
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I keep trying the "no peel", and I like it okay with the small ones, but if they are older, or you prefer them peeled, try freezing!

http://www.thekitchn.com/the-easiest...-kitchn-203867
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Old June 29, 2016   #98
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The Internet tells me that I can't grow favas as a fall crop where I am (SE Pennsylvania). Is this true, even if I grow something very cold tolerant and an earlier fava like Aquadulce? Has anyone in the Mid-Atlantic tried favas as a fall crop?
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Old June 30, 2016   #99
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what's the zone? how cold?
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Old June 30, 2016   #100
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bodhi Peace View Post
what's the zone? how cold?
7a. But isn't zone more about winter lows and not really about the nature of the growing season(s)?

These are average monthly temps near me: http://www.rssweather.com/climate/Pe.../Philadelphia/

Of course, that's average, so the usual caveats about occasional fluctuations toward extremes applies.
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Old June 30, 2016   #101
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I don't see how you could grow it if you are getting dips below 0 C.
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Old October 28, 2016   #102
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The most winter-hardy favas survive down to about 15 F to 20 F.

I had a good crop of fava beans this year. I grew them by planting seeds just before snowcover arrived, by putting out 3 week old transplants a couple days after the snow melted, and by direct seeding in the spring. They all did fine. The transplants did best. I also planted seeds in early August which produced a few pods in the fall. The plants still look great even after a lot of cold weather. I'm leaving them for the winter, just to see if anything survives.


Last edited by joseph; October 28, 2016 at 11:30 AM.
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Old October 28, 2016   #103
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Yes, I've realized that favas can't really work as a fall crop in my garden because there isn't enough time before the combo of reduced sun and cooler temps makes growth slow too much. Next year, I may try a fall sowing not for a fall crop but to see whether the plants survive the winter and give me a head start in spring. I have a small garden, so I'd prefer to grow them as an early spring crop like peas, to be replaced by heat-loving veggies like tomatoes, eggplant, peppers, etc. in late May/early June, but the DTM might be too long for favas to do that. I suppose I should try a few varieties to see whether I can manage it with any of them. I guess worst case scenario is that I don't get any beans but tons of green manure.

Any recommendations on varieties that are early? I assume Extra Precoce a Grano Violetto is supposed to be especially early. I've heard Aquadulce is early, but some sources have it later than Broad Windsor. I'm after the full-size but still young and green beans and would only grow out enough to the dry-bean stage for seed saving.
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Old October 28, 2016   #104
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I used to grow a variety called Victoria that produces a smaller bean. It is meant to be fall planted and comes up in Spring. It grew successfully here this way for many years.
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Old November 7, 2016   #105
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You can plant some varieties in summer and get a crop in December
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