Saturday, May 7, 2022

Heirloom Bean Chat With Russell Crow

I've thoroughly enjoyed chatting with various people that are admins of the Heirloom Addicts Anonymous groups. There are also a few members that I reached out to and asked if they would do a quick Q & A with me and send me some photos that they would like for me to include in the post. I knew, right away that I was going to message Russell Crow and ask him if he would agree to this. I was certainly relieved and happy that he said yes!

I've admired Russell Crow's heirloom bean growing abilities for quite some time. I think a lot of people think that heirloom tomatoes are my thing, but they aren't. I enjoy growing them, for sure, but my favorite things to grow are beans and peas.

Growing up in Forks, Washington, my dad would put in a backyard garden every year. He would always say that beans were his gig. Well, after trying to fight it and bend to my will and make it tomatoes, I finally acquiesce that I have a knack for growing beans and peas. And along came Russell's website, A Bean Collector's Window. Well, this is Russell's interview, so I'll save my journey for another time.



Mr. Crow says, "At my Deer fenced plot view from  about 150 feet in the air. The owner of the property has a drone and he took pictures in July when all the bush beans were growing well last year. He calls my garden project here "Bean Acres".

Q: What do you specialize in, as far as gardening?
A: I specialize in growing mostly heirloom beans. Pole types, bush, semi runners and Pole limas. For my own use I do grow tomatoes every season from seed I save myself and some seasons I will also grow a carrot crop. 
Q: When did you first get interested in growing rare and/or obscure heirloom bean varieties?
A: Back in the middle 1970's I was gardening and growing bush snap beans I had about 10 different varieties of commercial snap beans and was growing about a half dozen of dry beans all purchased from commercial seed catalogs. When I read the article that Rodal Press's Organic Gardening & Farming published in January 1978 about John Withee from Lynnfield, Ma "The Bean Man" and his "Wanigan Associates" bean network. I ordered his bean catalog and got 35 varieties of heirloom beans from him in February 1978. That was when I was off and runing with obscure bean varieties or heirlooms. I very rarely bought seed from seed catalogs after that. I still do grow some of the old commercial snap bean varieties of the 1950's and 60's. I've even obtained some pre-1950 bush snap bean varieties that were released by seed companies in the 1930's and 40's.




Q: Do you have a personal favorite bean variety?
A: I have so many bean varieties that it's a challenge to pick an absolute favorite. There are many good beans to grow. I would say for the last 10 years a pole bean called Louisiana AKA Louisiana Snap Bean. Is currently my top favorite snap bean to grow and use. It is very productive and it's beautiful to look at on the vine. Straight 7 to 8 inch green pods that are round and striped in purple. Of course those purple stripes fade away when cooked. I don't have a favorite dry bean. Again there are many good ones.
  
Q: On average, how many types of beans do you grow in a year and how big is your garden?
A: I grow about 150 varieties of beans in most seasons. Currently I cultivate about 4,000 square feet of garden space. I have a small amount of garden ground in my back yard and two flower beds around my house that are really used for tomatoes and beans most of the time. I have two offsite gardens on other people's property that I obtained by placing want ads in our local newspaper. One site is three miles from my house and it's about 2,200 square feet. The other offsite is 9 miles from my house and is behind a deer fence that I had constructed in 2017 at a cost of almost $4,000. This fenced off gardening enclosure is 80 feet long and 48 feet wide. It contains two 960 square foot raised bed garden plots that I had built at an approximate expense of about $3,300. The soil is beautiful loamy black soil but the drainage was not good so the raised beds so far seem to have fixed my drainage problem. Each bed has about 10 inches of topsoil that of course was already there. So my beans grown there might have 18 to 20 inches of topsoil to sink there roots into. I have a small roto-tiller that I load up on a small 4 foot trailer to go to my offsites to work the gardens there.   



Q: Tell me about your mentor. Who are they and why?
A: I can't say I ever had a mentor. There is nobody that I had that guided me or I asked gardening advice from. A lot of what I know I have probably picked up in reading here and there in books or articles. Plus my own garden experience. My father gardened in the 1950's when I was a small child which I observed and I think gardening just must have appealed to me. I'm the only one of 4 other siblings that have taken on gardening in a big way. There are people in the seed world that I have admired. John Withee with his Wanigan Associates bean network. Who had the foresight to seek out and save old bean varieties. I never met him I'm sorry to say. I have great admiration for the founders of the Seed Savers Exchange Kent and Diane Whealy. I joined SSE as a member in late 1978. They came to the realization that when older gardeners who were also saving old varieties of all sorts of cultivars passed away. The varieties they kept could possibly become extinct. Since the start of Seed Savers Exchange I think seed saving of heirloom varieties has caught on internationally also. I think another person to admire was Gary Nabhan who I believe started Native Seed Search in New Mexico. He had sounded the alarm I believe about loss of varieties and genetic loss of many of our food crops back in the late 1960's or early 70's. These people might just have been the spark that got all this heirloom seed saving going with the last 50 years. 

Side note: Russell Crow may not have had a mentor, but he's certainly one of mine!



This photo is one of the raised beds behind the deer fence with the bush beans at their peak of beauty in July last year.

Q: How many varieties of heirloom beans do you have in your personal seed collection?
A: My bean collection contains probably close to 1,300 varieties including original beans of mine that came about from outcrosses. I'm not a purist when it comes to heirlooms. I also have an open mind towards new cultivars. After all there might be over 100,000 bean varieties in the world today. Considering the they all genetically came from their wild ancestors in Central and South America that as far as they know number about 50 varieties in the wild today. Where did all these other bean varieties come from. They have to be the result of crossing and selecting by all kinds of people over a number of centuries. I think the process even continues today.    

Q: Do you sell seeds and, if so, how do people get in touch with you?
A: I do sell seeds. My website A Bean Collectors Window.com does attract people that are searching for beans on the internet and find my website. Last year I had 144 paying customers from around the U.S., Canada, all over Europe, South Africa, and I've even sent beans to people in the Ukraine and Russia. I have also attended 4 different seed swaps in various states like Michigan, Indiana, and Kentucky where I have sold a small number of beans.   




Q: What is the rarest bean seed in your collection right now?
A: That might be difficult to know but it might be a recent bean I got from a fellow in eastern Kentucky who is a registered member of the Cherokee nation. I got a bean from him called Awahsohs Bear. How many people know this native bean. I would think not too many. I don't know where he collects his native beans. He live in the mountains of south eastern Kentucky. 




If you want to visit Russell Crow's website, A Bean Collector's Window, click here.

You can also find him in Heirloom Bean Addicts Anonymous. Click here to join. He can also be found in Heirloom Tomato Addicts Anonymous. Click here to join.

So, in conclusion, I'd like to extend a huge thank you to Russell Crow for agreeing to do a Q & A for me. He may not have had a mentor, but he inspires people more than he can possibly know. I know. I'm one of those inspired people!

5 comments:

  1. What a great story! Thank you for sharing it.

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    1. This was someone that I've been wanting to chat with for quite some time now.

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  2. Awesome Interview!

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  3. What a cool experience with the Awahsohs Bear!

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    1. It's on my list now. I have like 500 or so on my list that I want to grow.

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