Order Retail Nursery Plants Online Here!
 


 
Trees Vines Rose
Bushes
Gardening
Accessories
New!
Seeds

Services
> Wholesale
> Support & Resources
> Gardening Q & A Library
Gardening Articles
Gardening Blog
 

 

Oak
Ornamental
Pine
Privacy
Shade
Small
Small Yard
Spruce
Tall
Unique
Wildlife
Windbreak
 

 
   




Buy Bush Bean Trio at Nursery Plants
 
       
A Gaggle of Gourds
A Real Shady Blend
A Summer of Squash
Basil - Italian Genovese
Basil - Italian Large Leaf
Bring Home the Butterflies
Bush Bean Trio
California Poppy - Orange
Catgrass
Cilantro ORGANIC
Dogwood - Red Twigged
Dried Delights
Drop Dead Red Sunflowers
 
Elderberry - American
Florist Favorite Yellow Sunflowers
Forsythia - Lynwood Gold
Forsythia - Meadowlark
Forsythia - Spectabilis
Grandmothers Cutflower Grd
Hibiscus syriacus 'Morning Star'
Honeysuckle-Pink Tatarian
Honeysuckle - Red Rum
Honeysuckle - Winter
Hummingbird Haven
Hydrangea - Late Panicle
 
Indigo Bush-False Indigo
Lilac - Common purple
Lilac - James Macfarlane
Lilac - White Persian
Privet - Amur North River
Privet - Chinese South
Pussy Willow - French
Pussy Willow - Pink
Pussy Willow - Silver
Rose of Sharon - Aphrodite
Rose of Sharon - Ardens
Rose of Sharon - Diana
Rose of Sharon-Jeanne DArc
 
Rose of Sharon - Lucy
Rose of Sharon-Paeonyflorus
Sassy Salad Mesclun
Short Meadow
Siberian Peashrub
Sprouts - Alfalfa ORGANIC
Sprouts - Mungbean ORGANIC
Sweet Baby Blue
Terrific Trailing Baskets
Witch-hazel - Common
Xeriscape Extreme
  

 

 
 
Bush Bean Trio : 

The Bush Bean Trio, 'Phaseolus vulgaris', is a three-bean "salad" in a packet. This trio of Blue Lake 274, Cherokee Wax, and Purple Queen bush beans is unsurpassed for flavor, productivity, reliability and hardiness. They have a wonderful fresh flavor and are ideal for canning or freezing. They create a colorful combination for creative cooking. The snap bean or bush bean is eaten pod and all, and is one of those vegetables like tomatoes that tastes significantly better when grown at home rather than bought at the grocery store.

Plant in the spring after last average frost date. For all areas, bush beans can be planted in succession to produce beans all season. Seed a new crop every 7 to 14 days for up to 60 days before the last frost. In very hot summer areas, beans should be planted in mid-March. The soil should be well drained and high in organic matter.This packet plants 2-10 foot rows.

 

$2.69 each   Click here to buy

 
   
 

Click here to buy   $2.69 each

 




 
 
Customer Testimonials | Customer Support | About Us | Privacy Policy | Site Map | Images & Content

  Nursery Plants.info
The Freshest Nursery Plants delivered directly to your door!
We proudly accept the following:
 
Copyright 2005-2008 Nursery Plants, Info.
All Rights Reserved.