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SUS Farms — Allegedly Organic

warm season · Fabaceae

Growing Pole Beans in Utah

Trellis 6 ft tall. Pick every other day at peak — they hide on the vine.

Schedule (May 15 last frost)

When to do what

Direct sow

5/22

First harvest

7/24

Dates are calibrated for SUS Farms (Sevier County, Zone 6a, last frost May 15). For your own date, use the interactive calendar.

Planting

How deep, how far apart

0"1"2"3"4"5"6"1" deep6" apart

Method

Direct sow

Seed depth

1″

Plant spacing

6″

Row spacing

36″

Germination temp

65–85°F

Days to maturity

65 days

How we grow it

Step-by-step

  1. 1.

    Direct sow 1″ deep, 6″ apart

    Soil should be at least 65°F before sowing — black plastic mulch laid down two weeks ahead helps in our cool springs. Water in deeply.

  2. 2.

    Mulch and water consistently

    2" of straw or wood chip mulch around the base. Drip line at the surface. Aim for 1" per week — including rain — measured at soil level, not by the calendar.

  3. 3.

    Harvest around day 65

    Days-to-maturity is a rough guide — taste, color, and size are the real signals. Trellis 6 ft tall. Pick every other day at peak — they hide on the vine.

From the farm

What we’ve learned growing pole beans

On our farm, pole beans is one of the rotations that grounds the season. We test new varieties every year alongside the staples — usually one experiment per row, surrounded by what we know works. Failures here are how we know what to recommend; the success stories make it into the catalog and onto our table.

Pests & problems

Fabaceae family pressures in Utah

Pole Beans shares its troubles with beans, peas, lentils, peanuts, clover. The pests and diseases below show up most years; the fixes are what we actually do, not what catalogs sell.

Scout weekly during the growing season — most outbreaks are 10x easier to manage when you catch them in week one.

Pest 1

Aphids — on new growth, especially in May. Easy to manage with water blasts before they form colonies.

Pest 2

Mexican bean beetle (rare in Utah but possible) — yellow-orange ladybug-shaped beetle. Hand-pick adults; egg masses are bright yellow on leaf undersides.

Pest 3

Bean leaf beetle — striped or red-orange. Skeletonizes leaves. Floating row cover during peak adult activity in June.

Disease 1

Bacterial blight — water-soaked spots that turn brown. Rotate, avoid working in wet plants, use disease-free seed.

Disease 2

Bean rust — orange pustules on undersides of leaves. Late-season; rarely yield-limiting if you harvest promptly.

Companion planting

What to plant near (and away from) pole beans

Most companion-planting charts you see online are folklore. The pairings below have either USU Extension research, Cornell vegetable MD pages, or our own multi-year farm logs behind them.

Plant near

Good companions

  • Corn and squash (Three Sisters)
  • Carrots (different root depth)
  • Cucumbers (beans shade lower stems, cukes climb the trellis)
  • Most non-allium crops benefit from beans nearby — N-fixation feeds neighbors.

Plant away from

Bad companions

  • Onion family (allelopathic; stunts bean growth)
  • Fennel (allelopathic to most crops)

Crop rotation

Legumes in year 4 of rotation. They leave the soil rich in nitrogen — plant heavy feeders (Solanaceae, Brassicas) the following year for best results.

Harvest & storage

Picking, keeping, preserving

When to pick

Days-to-maturity (65 days from sowing) is a baseline. The real signals are color, size, and feel. Trellis 6 ft tall. Pick every other day at peak — they hide on the vine.

How to harvest

Clean cuts with sharp pruners or scissors heal faster than ripped stems and reduce disease entry points. Harvest early morning when sugars are highest and the plant is fully turgid; afternoon-harvested produce wilts faster. Don't harvest when leaves are wet — fungal spores ride along.

Short-term storage

Most warm-season produce stores best at 50-55°F (NOT in the fridge — chilling injury reduces quality and flavor). Tomatoes especially: refrigeration kills flavor; counter-store at 55-65°F until ripe.

Long-term preservation

Freezing, canning, drying, and fermenting all preserve pole beans. Pick the method that matches your kitchen and how you actually use the harvest — frozen tomatoes are great for sauce but bad for sandwiches; dried herbs work everywhere; fermented vegetables shine in salads.

Mistakes we’ve made

Common ways to fail at pole beans

Each of these has cost us a season at some point. Easier to learn from someone else’s lost crop than your own.

1.

Planting too deep

The fix:Pole Beans seeds want exactly 1" of cover — about a knuckle deep — the depth of your first finger joint. Deeper than that and the seedling exhausts itself before reaching light. Carrots and lettuce especially: shallow is right; sprinkle, then cover with a dusting of soil and tamp gently.

2.

Watering on a calendar instead of by need

The fix:Stick a finger or screwdriver 4" into the bed. Damp at depth = wait. Dry at depth = water deeply. Calendar watering ignores rain, heat waves, and seasonal evapotranspiration — leading to either drought stress or root rot.

3.

Ignoring soil pH

The fix:Most Utah backyard soil tests at pH 7.4-8.4 (alkaline). Iron and zinc become unavailable to roots above pH 7.5 — leaves yellow, growth stalls. A $20 mailer test from USU Extension tells you exactly what your soil needs. Sulfur amendment in fall, foliar iron mid-season as needed.

4.

Planting too early

The fix:A warm-season crop set out before soil hits 60°F at 4" depth sits and sulks — sometimes for weeks before either dying outright or refusing to grow until July. Wait. Better to plant a week late than plant 3 weeks early into cold soil.

Common questions

Frequently asked about pole beans

+Can I direct-seed pole beans in Utah?

Yes. Direct sow, wait until soil temperature hits 65°F (use a soil probe thermometer; air temp is misleading). Sow 1" deep, 6" apart. Black plastic mulch laid 2 weeks ahead of sowing warms the soil 8-10°F faster.

+Why are my pole beans leaves turning yellow?

Three usual suspects. (1) Iron chlorosis — yellow leaves with green veins is the Utah classic; the cause is alkaline soil locking up iron. Foliar iron rescues the season; sulfur amendment in fall fixes it long-term. (2) Nitrogen deficiency — entire leaf yellow including veins, starts with old leaves. Side-dress with compost or a slow-release organic fertilizer. (3) Overwatering — yellowing accompanied by soft, mushy stems means the roots are drowning. Check drainage; reduce water frequency.

+Can I plant pole beans before the last frost date?

Not safely. Pole Beans is a warm-season crop — even a light frost (28-32°F) kills the plant or stunts it for the rest of the season. Wait until soil hits 65°F at 4" depth AND there are no freezing temperatures in the 14-day forecast. In Sevier County that's typically the third week of May. Black plastic mulch + floating row cover let you push planting 7-10 days earlier.

+How long does pole beans take from seed to harvest?

65 days from direct sowing. Days-to-maturity is a baseline — cool springs add a week or two; hot summers can speed up by similar amounts. Use it for planning, not as a strict calendar.

+What's the spacing between pole beans plants?

6" between plants in the row, 36" between rows. That gives mature plants room to fill in without competing. Closer spacing reduces yield per plant; wider spacing wastes garden space. The numbers come from average mature plant size at full vegetative growth — adjust slightly for compact varieties (closer) or large heirlooms (wider).

Same family (Fabaceae)

Related crops

Sources:Johnny’s Selected Seeds·USU Extension·Cross-checked with our greenhouse logs.