Cauliflower · Brisbane, QLD
A local how-to for Brisbane’s subtropical climate, the planting window, the spacing, the pest pressure, and the family-of-four quantities. Built for raised beds.
The local entry
Plant cauliflower in Brisbane february-june.
Climate: Subtropical · Spacing: 60 cm · Days to harvest: 80-120 days · Sun: full
Planting window
February-June
Spacing
60 cm
70 cm rows
Sun
Full sun
Water
High
Growing cauliflower in Brisbane sits inside a specific window, february-june, and the success of the crop hinges on respecting it. Brisbane's subtropical climate runs winter lows of about 11°C and summer highs around 31°C, with frost risk: Frost-free. Those numbers are the ones every Brisbane gardener already knows by feel; they're the reason why the same crop behaves differently in a Sydney raised bed compared to a Hobart one.
Start with the bed itself. A raised bed of at least 30 cm depth gives cauliflower room for roots to extend, and in Brisbane, that depth also buffers the soil temperature against the swings that catch out shallow planters. Work compost through the top 20-30 cm until the bed mix is loose and friable. Target a soil pH of 6.0-7.5, which is the band cauliflower prefers. If your Brisbane water is alkaline (which it often is on the mainland), add a handful of sulphur or composted leaves to nudge the pH down. See our raised bed calculator if you’re sizing the bed from scratch.
Brisbane's subtropical summers are tough on cool-season crops, don't fight the season. Focus July-September on your best planting window for tomatoes and capsicum.
Space plants 60 cm apart, with 70 cm between rows. A standard 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed in Brisbane holds up to 6 cauliflower plants at maximum density, though in practice you'll plant 60-70 percent of that to leave room for Dill and Sage. Full sun (6+ hours daily). High, consistent moisture throughout; water stress causes premature heading. If you want the full plant-by-plant spacing reference, the plant spacing chart is the printable version.
Cauliflower is the most demanding brassica to grow and the most sensitive to growing conditions. Its ideal growing temperature is 10-18°C, too cold and the plant 'bolts' to button heads; too warm and it produces the same result. In most Australian climates, this means autumn to late winter is the cauliflower season. Start seeds indoors 4-6 weeks before transplanting. Seedlings should be well established (6-8cm tall, stocky) before transplanting into the final bed. Handle roots carefully and water in with seaweed solution to reduce transplant shock.
Brisbane's subtropical summers add disease pressure that southern cities don't deal with, humidity is the constant. Cabbage white butterfly caterpillars devastate cauliflower, use fine insect exclusion netting or Bt spray from transplanting. Buttoning (tiny premature heads) is caused by temperature stress, root damage, or drought, plant at the right time and maintain consistent moisture. The flip side is the long autumn-to-winter shoulder, cauliflower in Brisbane can produce for months when southern cities have stopped, so timing the planting on the right side of the heat is the lever that matters most.
Good companions for cauliflower in Brisbane’s climate include Dill, Sage, Thyme, Celery. These pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep cauliflower away from Tomato, Strawberry, Fennel because they fight for the same nutrients or attract shared pests. The full matrix lives in our companion planting guide.
When it comes to the harvest itself, Harvest cauliflower when the curd is compact, tight, and white (for white varieties), at 15-20cm diameter. Once the surface begins to separate and take on a grainy texture, it is overripe. Cut the whole head with a sharp knife, leaving some of the stem and surrounding leaves attached. Side shoots sometimes develop after harvest, producing smaller but edible secondary curds. Expect around 1 head per plant (500g-1.5kg); possible side shoots. For a Brisbane household of four, Plant 6-8 plants staggered over 4-6 weeks for sequential harvest for a family of 4
Brisbane gardeners tend to do their best work when they stop treating the year as one long growing season and start treating it as a series of windows. The window for cauliflower in your climate is february-june, set a reminder for the weekend before it opens, get the seedlings in, and the rest is just looking after them.
Brisbane record
The numbers above sit behind every recommendation on this page. They’re the same climate signal Plant Planner reads from your postcode, see frost dates by city for the longer view.
Plant cauliflower in Brisbane february-june. Use a raised bed at least 30 cm deep with compost-rich mix, space plants 60 cm apart in rows 70 cm apart, give it full sun (6+ hours daily), and water consistently. Expect 80-120 days from planting to first harvest.
In Brisbane (subtropical climate, frost risk: Frost-free), the productive window for cauliflower is february-june. Within that window, planting in the first two weeks gives the longest harvest tail.
Plant 6-8 plants staggered over 4-6 weeks for sequential harvest for a family of 4 Expected yield per plant: 1 head per plant (500g-1.5kg); possible side shoots. Plant Planner runs this calculation against your exact household size when you sign up.
Good companions in Brisbane include Dill, Sage, Thyme, Celery, Beetroot. These pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination in Brisbane's subtropical climate. Keep cauliflower away from Tomato, Strawberry, Fennel, they compete for nutrients or attract shared pests.
Full sun (6+ hours daily). In Brisbane's subtropical climate, afternoon shade in the hottest months helps avoid heat stress on the plant.
Cabbage white butterfly caterpillars devastate cauliflower, use fine insect exclusion netting or Bt spray from transplanting. Buttoning (tiny premature heads) is caused by temperature stress, root damage, or drought, plant at the right time and maintain consistent moisture. Hollow stem indicates boron deficiency, apply borax solution preventively. Club root is a serious soilborne disease, lime the bed to maintain pH above 7.0.
Tell us your postcode, family size, and the size of your bed. The planner runs the maths, lays out the bed, and emails you the planting reminders when the weekend before each task arrives.
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