Sure! First, you need to time the planting right so that the corn is the right height for the beans to grow on at the right time. Then you have to manage the beans so that they trellise properly without choking the corn or squash. The stalks grow quickly, so you need to check them and adjust every day. Same with the squash.
Eventually by the time it’s all growing well you have a large thick layer of vegitation that is all tangled together. You need to get through it to water, weed, pest control, and harvest, all while keeping sure not to accidentally step or trip on anything.
It’s not impossible, but compared to seperate trellises for beans, rows of corn, and a squash mound it’s just a lot more work every day to keep up with.
Yes so I might be missing something. I tried it once, but all I learned was you can’t really manage 3 sisters in one pot on your balcony. Those roots need to go deep. I got 3 bean pods, a half-cob of corn and a couple male squash blossoms before they all caught mildew and died.
I paintbrush-pollinated my one corn, it obviously didn’t do that well but it tried, made a small multicolored ear. The “Trail of Tears” bean plant made pretty little pink flowers but I had to add a tomato cage because my corn was too spindly to support it. I let one pod ripen fully and steamed the other two, they were good. Yeah the squash never really had a chance.
But it’s all good fun, and I do have success with cherry tomatoes, lemons, and blueberries.
Can you explain how it so drastically increases manual labor?
Sure! First, you need to time the planting right so that the corn is the right height for the beans to grow on at the right time. Then you have to manage the beans so that they trellise properly without choking the corn or squash. The stalks grow quickly, so you need to check them and adjust every day. Same with the squash.
Eventually by the time it’s all growing well you have a large thick layer of vegitation that is all tangled together. You need to get through it to water, weed, pest control, and harvest, all while keeping sure not to accidentally step or trip on anything.
It’s not impossible, but compared to seperate trellises for beans, rows of corn, and a squash mound it’s just a lot more work every day to keep up with.
I would imagine it’s because you’d need to be careful not to harm one plant when helping or harvesting the other.
That doesn’t sound like a lot more labor.
Yes so I might be missing something. I tried it once, but all I learned was you can’t really manage 3 sisters in one pot on your balcony. Those roots need to go deep. I got 3 bean pods, a half-cob of corn and a couple male squash blossoms before they all caught mildew and died.
Corn is wind-pollinated. You can’t just grow one stalk, you need dozens at minimum so they can pollinate each other.
Squash plants need tons of space on the ground. The stems/vines will actually send out roots wherever they touch moist soil.
I paintbrush-pollinated my one corn, it obviously didn’t do that well but it tried, made a small multicolored ear. The “Trail of Tears” bean plant made pretty little pink flowers but I had to add a tomato cage because my corn was too spindly to support it. I let one pod ripen fully and steamed the other two, they were good. Yeah the squash never really had a chance.
But it’s all good fun, and I do have success with cherry tomatoes, lemons, and blueberries.