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Phaseolus vulgaris
A great-tasting stringless white-seed bean. Produces uniform and convenient straight beans approximately 6in (15cm) long. Satelit is a variety with cold tolerance for early-cropping.
12 x Garden Ready Plugs
10806012
Sold out this season
£6.79
10805862
£8.49
Standard Delivery £4.95* | Learn More
Standard Delivery £4.95*
Standard £4.95 - When showing as 'In Stock' on the website product page items are dispatched by our expert team within 24hrs of placing your order 7 days a week.
Received and ready for planting within 2 days of placing your order.
For 'Pre-Orders' please refer to the estimated delivery date on each product page. Further details in below table of when we send pre-ordered items out.
High Yield
Low Maintenance
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Plant outdoors
Harvest
Great-tasting stringless white-seed bean. Produces uniform and convenient straight beans approximately 6in (15cm) long. Satelit is a exclusive variety with cold tolerance for early-cropping. Pods are held up and away from the foliage for easy pickings of handsome harvests.
Disease resistant to common mosaic virus and anthracnose disease- all you need to know is that you’re safe in the knowledge that this variety will provide you lots of healthy, disease-free beans.
We recommend you position 3 young plants outdoors in their permanent position of flowering and fruiting. Space plants 6in (15cm) apart when you place them outside.
Expect a bowlful to colander-ful of bean pods per plant for the season. If you feed your plants with a potash-rich feed like Westland Sulphate of potash, when your plants are in flower – you may get even more beans.
Keep an eye on the weather. If it’s forecasted a particularly cold night with frosts, cover your plants over with a horticultural fleece, which we provide at Marshalls, in the evening to give them that protection from the cold. This dwarf variety grows to around 18in (45cm) tall.
How to grow
Where to grow peas and French beans
Plant peas and beans in an open, sunny location with free-draining soil. Avoid planting beans in cold or very wet soil. Grow peas and beans in different areas of the garden each year to avoid build ups of pests and diseases.
How to prepare the soil for peas and French beans
Ideally, prepare the soil the previous autumn or winter to allow the ground to settle.
Dig in some well-rotted compost or farmyard manure to improve the structure and fertility of the soil. Add a dressing of lime to acid soil to raise its pH level.
Nutrient levels can also be boosted by applying a light dressing of general-purpose fertiliser a couple of weeks before sowing.
If desired, the soil can be warmed by putting down polythene sheets a few weeks before planting.
How to Plant Peas and French Beans
Push the base of the tray and ease out the plug. At this stage you can decide to plant each cell as it is with several plants in that cell or separate each plant out. Do this by gently pulling the compost apart, separating the roots of each plant.
Dig a hole similar size to the plug or plant, ensuring the roots are not coiled around and are facing downwards into the hole. Back fill, firm in the soil and give them a good water.
If planting in rows – plant about 10cm apart or if up supports, plant at the base of each cane.
How to support peas and beans
Supports are needed for peas and runner and climbing French beans.
Shorter varieties of peas grow well on twiggy branches, such as hazel, or pea netting. Use bamboo canes and netting for taller ones.
Train climbing French beans against bamboo canes, which can be arranged as a row of A-frames or tied together to form a wigwam.
When to harvest peas and beans
Early peas take between 12 and 14 weeks to reach maturity while maincrop varieties need 16 weeks before they’re ready to be picked.
French beans should be ready to pick from July, depending on sowing times.
Feel the pods to make sure they’re well filled before picking.
How to harvest peas and beans
Pick regularly to encourage the plant to produce more pods.
French beans should be harvested when pods reach 10cm (4 inches) and are easy to snap.
Grasp the pod and twist gently to detach it from the plant.
How to protect peas and beans
Young French bean and pea plants are prone to attacks by slugs. Use preferred slug deterrent to keep them at bay. Use netting to deter birds from pulling up new bean and pea shoots. Mice will sometimes eat newly-sown peas and beans: start plants in pots if this is a problem.
Look out for powdery and downy mildew on peas, which can be reduced with good airflow around the plants, don’t plant too densely together. Avoid getting water on the leaves and don’t water late in the day, best to do it early in the morning so the sun can dry them off. Remove immediately any diseased plants as these will infect close by plants.
Guide To Plant Sizes
These plants have been grown in a 12 cell tray with several seeds sown per cell. Each of these plants are ready to be planted directly into the garden. If there is a delay, remove them from the box and give them a good water. Place them outside in a cool spot, out of direct sunlight until ready to be planted, keep well watered. These plants will keep for approx. a week in the tray but ideally be planted within a couple of days.
Why Marshalls Garden
Soil Type
Beans prefer light, fertile, well drained soils. You can add organic matter, such as compost, to improve soil structure before sowing.
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