Allotment Gardening Advice Help Chat

Growing => Grow Your Own => Topic started by: maxibo on April 14, 2013, 19:03

Title: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: maxibo on April 14, 2013, 19:03
Hi All!  I've having a browse around the site and came across a discussion thread about Munty's Runner Bean Frame.  I've been hunting around the site trying to find the  'original' instructions about how to construct the frame, which way to orientate it etc.  Can any of you guys point me in the right direction? Ta!
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: mumofstig on April 14, 2013, 19:22
the way to orient it is shown here.........
http://chat.allotment-garden.org/index.php?topic=50801.msg402866#msg402866

In that thread you can see many methods of construction  ;)
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: maxibo on April 14, 2013, 20:57
Ah thank you!  I did stare at that sketch for some time but failed to see the great big 'S' marking South. Doh!  ::) Its been a long day! Thanks again - I shall definitely be giving it a go, it looks amazing!
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: Trillium on April 14, 2013, 22:06
I set mine up about 5-6 years ago and it's still there and still doing duty. The runner beans yield so well on it that I've put in less beans and put in some long cucumbers to one side and they love it. Haven't moved mine since I installed it as beans really don't need to be moved and I alter the side for the cukes each year.
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: Spana on April 14, 2013, 22:28
Same here, mines not moved either and I've used the same strings for 4 years. I've tried a lot of ways to hold up runners and this knocks the socks off every other method.
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: Trillium on April 14, 2013, 22:36
I used jute once. Only because it barely lasted the season. Since then, I've used polypropolene baler twine and that lasts 2 full years before it needs replacing. We get a lot of sun here and the UV rays really give the twine a beating and by year 3 it's not reliable for the whole season. I resent wasting time stringing beans and cukes back up so I simply do a replacement each 3rd year and get it over with. 

Love this system because I can find everything that's ready to pick because it's hanging right in front of me  :D
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: Spana on April 14, 2013, 22:51
You get SUN  ;)
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: madcat on April 15, 2013, 07:53
I think our frame is on its fourth or fifth season.  We tried jute and it just broke under the weight of the vines (runner and french beans).  So we now use polyprop twine, new each season.  It is easier for us just to cut the whole lot down, pull the twine out from the vines (and usually reuse!) and compost the vines.  New string in the spring and off we go again.  Not long now!   8)
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: Sadgit on April 15, 2013, 08:12
I miss my munty frame. It was a feature of my plot and admired by all around me.
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: maxibo on April 15, 2013, 09:40
Thanks everyone.  I was wondering whether it would be possible to leave the frame in place.  We have a beautiful tea rose bush, that we inherited from the previous plot owner, it's really in the way but we don't want to get rid so I reckon I can build the frame to fit around/over the tea rose and still make the whole area a useable space.  Thanks for the info about which twine to use too.  I've read the discussion thread and I know the tall posts need to be 6ft and the shorter ones 3ft but what sort of distance between the short and long posts is best to make the frame stable? Cheers all!
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: JayG on April 15, 2013, 09:53
A 5' diagonal will give you a total run of 8' for the beans if you use 3' uprights which is about as far as runner beans will go.

My trigonometry isn't up to much these days but this will give a depth of somewhere around 4' from front to back (depending on the height of the tall posts.)

(My Munty is permanent and made from angle iron, which enabled me to "string" it with galvanised wire (permanent on the diagonals, removal loops of wire on the verticals.)

A wooden frame would need to be quite strong to use wire though because you need to pull it quite tight.
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: Spana on April 15, 2013, 14:45
Mines made of scaffold poles and fittings.
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: maxibo on April 15, 2013, 15:16
Thank you JayG.  My trigonometry isn't up to anything as it all fell out of my head a very long time ago! But the measurements you've given make absolute sense to me. Amazing! I shall do the sensible thing and measure once, measure twice etc etc before I start knocking posts into the ground.  The cider drinking old timers on our site will wonder what the hell I'm doing so I need to get it right - me being a girl and all! 
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: JayG on April 15, 2013, 15:31
I thought it would be easier to draw the design to scale than try to remember any trig (I was wrong - still took hours!) but this pic is what I finished up with (obviously this is the bit above ground, there's a couple of feet more buried in the soil.)
(https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-hKqK7QxZ6Ig/UWwOJcdUfJI/AAAAAAAABqA/8Ppis1BfEpc/s400/Fullscreen%2520capture%252015042013%2520152131.jpg)
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: maxibo on April 15, 2013, 16:47
Ah JayG you are a marvel!  This is exactly what I wanted but couldn't find on the site anywhere.  I even trawled through every page in the design and construction section. I've been registered on this site for ages and got loads of info, have a well thumbed copy of John's 'The Essential Allotment Guide' but never posted a question before!  Within 24 hours I have my question answered! Brilliant!
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: Trillium on April 16, 2013, 02:32
I cheated. I made mine just over 2 ft wide at the sides and I added extra bracing on the sides both at the bottom and the point where the diagonal starts. It's stood up nicely to some serious winds. The top highest point is almost 6 ft tall, the back bit about 2-1/2 to 3 ft tall. You can make it any size you want or to fit a specific situation. Only criteria is that there be the pronounced slope so beans and cukes can hang down.

I used some 2x2's we had sitting around and drywall screws which surprisingly have lasted all these years.
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: captainhastings on September 18, 2013, 07:51
Can some one confirm I have my directions right ?

(http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7400/9796678983_46ae72bcf9_c.jpg)

About to dig a trench but bit unclear of the direction of my frame. I think the plan is to expose the roof of the frame to maximum sun ?
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: mumofstig on September 18, 2013, 08:13
The tall side is on the South side, as per the original instructions, here

http://chat.allotment-garden.org/index.php?topic=50801.msg402866#msg402866.

That way light gets to the crops you've planted underneath, and the beans should grow towards the sun (with a bit of help  :D )
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: captainhastings on September 18, 2013, 08:23
My allotment goes east to west so the other way around than my picture then will be the best I can get I guess
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: pigguns on September 18, 2013, 15:08
It's brilliant.  My first year with one, made it of 8ft trampoline safety netting poles (don't worry- trampoline long gone  :happy:), but 5ft back/6ft front.  Reading here I'll alter the plan a bit, and make it wider but as I use it as a tunnel across the centre path will keep the hight ( -well I fit under it!). 

It's been great, runners up & over and cordon toms on the other (S) side.   
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: maxibo on September 18, 2013, 20:04
What can I say?  Except the Munty Frame is a marvel!  We built ours in the late spring and are having fab crops of runners and climbing beans.  For me being of shorter stature (5ft 2") the brilliant thing about the frame is its so easy to pick the beans and I haven't missed any at all so no big stringy old things here.   :)
Title: Re: Munty's Runner Bean Frame
Post by: devonbarmygardener on September 19, 2013, 18:39
Built mine for the first time this year and it works a treat ;) :D

I used canes, but then my site is pretty well sheltered apart from the depths of winter and it will be down by then.