
Originally Posted by
Poor Richard
In 1994 I was painting the kitchen which gave it a new look, and I bought a few decorative clear glass food containers and put a variety of attractive dried beans in the containers.
One variety is called an Anasazi bean, which was probably grown by White Folks thousands of years ago in Southwestern America.
The word "Anasazi" is a word the Asian savages in that area use which means "enemy" and every savage tribe of Asians in that area still call them Anasazi/enemy. White Folks did live in that area, and the remains of the Anasazi display the most technology in that area, so that was most likely the White Folks who lived there.
The Anasazi bean still exists, even though the Asian savages who surrounded the Anasazi people wiped them from the face of this world in hundreds of years of violent Indian attacks.
Some of the Asian savages still live today in houses built by the Anasazi people. The invading Asian savages still have not advanced to the level of the Anasazi.
I had some of those Anasazi beans left from 1994, and planted a few to see if any would grow, and they did.
I saved several for seeds and will plant more of them in the spring.
They grow into a low bush, and make a lot of large beans. They look similar to a pinto bean, but are a white bean with reddish marking, compared to a pinto which is a light brown bean with a dark brown marking.
In the spring, I plan on planting both a few bush beans, and a lot of pole beans.
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