Climbing Bean plants in Terra cotta pots on the back deck growing veggies for my dinner plate.

#Gardening#GrowYourOwn#ContainerGarden#BackDeck#ClimbingBeans#MastoGarden#MastoGreens
Climbing Bean plants beginning to climb the trellis with Snow Peas ascend from the raised bed in the background.

#Gardening#GrowYourOwn#ContainerGarden#BackDeck#ClimbingBeans
#SnowPeas
#MastoGarden#MastoGreens
Trellised wall of French Climbing Beans in the back garden. Starting to wonder what I’m doing wrong as I’ve had very few beans even though plants have been flowering. Looking into it I might be watering too much or perhaps the Neem oil I’ve been using to dissuade bugs from munching the leaves has also precluded pollinators. Seems like I should be eating more from all my hard work! #Garden #Gardening #Veggies #ClimbingBeans #DIY #GrowYourOwn

Christmas crackers this year filled with heirloom seeds. My sister in law sharing the goodness.

#seeds #cucumber #ClimbingBeans #crackers

My interpretation of the Three Sisters. Predominantly a Seneca Nation and east coast concept and traditional planting methodology, the Three Sisters are squash, corn and climbing beans. The symbolise both an intercropping technique and community relational constructs.

You can read more about the Three Sisters here: https://www.nal.usda.gov/collections/stories/three-sisters

The idea for this was gifted to me JP Prettybull, a Ponca and Yankton Sioux anthropology PhD student. I made it my own by using a cucurbita gourd - in honour of my favourite bead stitch and my late mentor who taught it to me - as well as a stylised heirloom corn and the climbing beans my mom had in her garden when I was I a kid.

#beadwork #ThreeSisters #beading #NezPerce #NezPerceBeadwork #Gourds #Corn #ClimbingBeans

The Three Sisters of Indigenous American Agriculture | National Agricultural Library

A review of the intercropping method of planting corn, beans, and squash together, commonly called The Three Sisters.