I pulled up the sweetcorn plants today and as I was checking them over to make sure I hadn't missed any eatable cobs (not quite wishful thinking - I found one!) it seemed that there were lots of undeveloped / unpollinated cobs i.e. seemed like there were 1 or 2 of these on every plant just about.
(There were also a few cob stumps where the cob had been completely eaten by earwigs and/or woodlice, although obviously I don't know if they ate undeveloped ones or what.)
I haven't been counting, and the veg is shared out anyway so I don't know exactly how many cobs we had altogether, but I reckon we probably had one good cob per plant, or near enough anyway. So I don't feel too hard done by as I believe 1 cob per plant is within normal expectation.
My question is - why did so many cobs fail to pollinate and develop? Is it because the plant is only capable of supporting one cob so if there are more they just don't develop? Is it because the pollen is only available for a short time so any silks that appear too late won't get any? Is it because we planted them far too close together (which we did)? Or what?!
NB no idea what variety they were, they were bought as plants from the farmer's market, so probably not any expensive F1 types!
Any thoughts greatly appreciated, so I know what to do differently next year if necessary. Thanks!
(There were also a few cob stumps where the cob had been completely eaten by earwigs and/or woodlice, although obviously I don't know if they ate undeveloped ones or what.)
I haven't been counting, and the veg is shared out anyway so I don't know exactly how many cobs we had altogether, but I reckon we probably had one good cob per plant, or near enough anyway. So I don't feel too hard done by as I believe 1 cob per plant is within normal expectation.
My question is - why did so many cobs fail to pollinate and develop? Is it because the plant is only capable of supporting one cob so if there are more they just don't develop? Is it because the pollen is only available for a short time so any silks that appear too late won't get any? Is it because we planted them far too close together (which we did)? Or what?!
NB no idea what variety they were, they were bought as plants from the farmer's market, so probably not any expensive F1 types!
Any thoughts greatly appreciated, so I know what to do differently next year if necessary. Thanks!
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