(70 days shell, 95 days dry) Open pollinated.
This bush bean is not to be confused with pole bean True Red Cranberry or the pink-flecked Italian Borlotti bean. Early horticultural compendiums list two New World varieties, Dwarf Cranberry and Pole Cranberry, being grown by native peoples in New England. Vermont Cranberry is the Dwarf Cranberry’s descendant, probably outfitted with a place name by an enterprising seedsman. A New England tradition since before 1800. Vermont Cranberry’s pods contain 5 to 6 speckled cranberry-colored shell beans. Reliable, hardy, easy to shell. Sometimes gets viny.
Indigenous Royalties.Supplier Transparency:
① Small seed farmers including Fedco staff