Sweetcorn · Adelaide, SA
When to plant sweetcornin Adelaide.
Adelaide’s mediterranean/temperate climate gives you a specific window for sweetcorn. Here’s the exact timing, spacing, family-of-4 quantities, and what to plant alongside it.
The short answer
Plant september-january in Adelaide.
Climate zone: Mediterranean/Temperate · Frost risk: Frost-free (plains), light frosts July-August in Hills · Time to harvest: 70-90 days
Planting window
September-January
Spacing
30 cm apart
40 cm between rows
Sun & water
Full sun (6+ hours daily)
Water: Regular, particularly critical during silking and kernel fill
Family of 4
Plant at least 16 plants (4×4 block) for a family of 4; succession plant every 3 weeks for extended harvest
Growing sweetcorn in Adelaide: the specifics
Adelaide shares Perth's Mediterranean climate but with slightly cooler winters and a more distinct spring growing season. Hot, dry summers can exceed 40°C during heatwaves, while winters are mild with reliable rainfall. The Adelaide Hills just east of the city experience noticeably cooler conditions with light frosts, while the plains and coastal suburbs rarely frost. Spring and autumn are Adelaide's gardening goldilocks zones, warm enough for most vegetables, cool enough for quality harvests. For sweetcorn, the productive window in Adelaide is september-january. Within that window, Sweetcorn is wind-pollinated, which means it must be grown in a block (at least 4 rows × 4 plants) rather than a single row, isolated plants will produce poorly filled cobs with missing kernels. In a standard 1.2m wide raised bed, plant 4 rows with 30cm spacing for the minimum viable block. Direct sow sweetcorn seeds 3-4cm deep after soil temperature reaches 18°C. Corn does not transplant well. In cooler climates, use black plastic mulch to pre-warm the bed 2 weeks before planting. Sweetcorn is the tallest vegetable typically grown in raised beds (1.5-2m) and provides valuable shade for lower-growing crops to its south. In the Three Sisters arrangement, plant corn first, then beans (which will climb the corn stalks), then zucchini or pumpkin (which shades the ground between). Feed corn generously, it is one of the heaviest nitrogen feeders in the vegetable garden. Apply complete fertiliser at planting, then top-dress with a high-nitrogen fertiliser (or blood and bone) when plants reach 30cm, and again at knee height. Deep, consistent watering at silking (when silk emerges from the ear tip) is critical for kernel development, moisture stress at this stage causes poor cob fill. Choose hybrid sweetcorn varieties for best flavour: 'Honey & Pearl' (bicolour), 'Sweet Nugget', and 'Honey Select' are excellent Australian performers. Standard sweetcorn varieties have better flavour than supersweet types when eaten immediately after harvest.
Sizing it for your household
Plant at least 16 plants (4×4 block) for a family of 4; succession plant every 3 weeks for extended harvest 1-2 cobs per plant. Plant Planner does this maths automatically once you tell it your household size, it’s the part most planners get wrong because they assume every household is the same.
The 30 cm spacing (with 40 cm between rows) means a standard 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed in Adelaide can hold 24 sweetcorn plants at maximum density, though in practice you’ll want to mix companions in, so plan for roughly 60-70% of that.
Companion plants for Adelaide
Good companions for sweetcorn include Beans, Zucchini, Pumpkin, Cucumber. In Adelaide’s mediterranean/temperate climate, these pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep sweetcorn away from Tomato, Fennel, they fight for the same nutrients or attract shared pests.
Adelaide-specific tips
- Adelaide's extreme summer heatwaves (40°C+) can kill vegetable plants within hours, keep shadecloth on hand and water deeply the day before forecast heatwaves.
- The Adelaide Hills is its own microclimate, if you garden above 400m, treat your conditions more like Canberra and expect frosts from June to September.
- Adelaide's low summer rainfall means drip irrigation is essential, hand-watering raised beds in 38°C heat is exhausting and inefficient.
Common problems
Corn earworm (Helicoverpa armigera) is the most serious pest, larvae enter cobs through the silk and eat kernels. Apply a few drops of paraffin oil to the silk when it dries and begins to turn brown to prevent entry. Aphids cluster in the whorl and on the silk, spray off with water. Armyworm caterpillars can devastate plantings; treat with Bt or spinosad. Root rot occurs in waterlogged beds, ensure excellent drainage before planting.
Harvest
Sweetcorn is ready when the silk has turned dark brown and dry, and the cob feels firm when squeezed. Peel back the husk tip and press a kernel with your thumbnail, clear juice means underripe; milky juice means perfect; thick, paste-like juice means overripe. Harvest by gripping the cob and snapping downward. Cook and eat within hours of harvest for maximum sweetness.
Other mediterranean/temperate cities
Frequently asked
When should I plant sweetcorn in Adelaide?
In Adelaide (mediterranean/temperate climate), plant sweetcorn September-January. Frost risk in Adelaide: Frost-free (plains), light frosts July-August in Hills.
How many sweetcorn plants does a family of 4 need?
Plant at least 16 plants (4×4 block) for a family of 4; succession plant every 3 weeks for extended harvest. Expected yield per plant: 1-2 cobs per plant. Plant Planner does this calculation automatically based on your exact household size.
How much space does sweetcorn need in a Adelaide raised bed?
Sweetcorn needs 30cm between plants and 40cm between rows. For a family of 4, allow enough bed area to fit the plants noted above with that spacing.
How long does sweetcorn take to grow in Adelaide?
Sweetcorn takes 70-90 days. Germination is 7-14 days. Adelaide's mediterranean/temperate climate can shift these windows by a week or two, particularly during the shoulder seasons.
What grows well with sweetcorn?
Good companions in Adelaide include Beans, Zucchini, Pumpkin, Cucumber. Avoid planting next to Tomato, Fennel.