I can't hear you very well http://tiava.in.net tiava com At Glemham, that’s not what happens. Caroline walks the rows of plants most mornings on her way to feed her chickens and as soon as the leaves start to turn yellow on the vines and drop, she’ll pick the beans, pod by pod, as each one ripens. You can tell when they’re ready: the pods turn brown and slightly crisp, the beans rattling inside their case. This is true of all drying bean varieties, which must not be harvested too soon. If picked when the pod is still soft, they go mouldy. However, neither must you leave them on the plant too long or they will fail to dry out in the autumn dews and rain. Timing is everything.