How to Pollinate Corn for Plump, Full Ears!

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Why Are Your Corn Ears Not Full?

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Everyone loves sweet corn. So, it can be disheartening when there are gaps left between our cobs’ kernels. The secret to full ears of corn packed with sweet, juicy kernels is proper pollination! Learn how to ensure your corn is sufficiently pollinated, including tips on how to hand-pollinate your corn.

If your corn doesn’t get properly pollinated, it can’t produce those creamy kernels. It’s that simple!

How Does Corn Get Pollinated?

To find solutions to this, let’s start by looking at how corn is pollinated. Corn is actually a type of grass, and like other grasses, the flowers are wind-pollinated. Plants produce separate male and female flowers, with the male flowers, called tassels, sitting right at the top of the plant where they can catch the wind, enabling the pollen to be carried off in the breeze.

The female flowers are located further down the plant and are what will eventually form your ears of corn. The female flowers have protruding silks, whose job is to intercept some of the pollen drifting down from the tassels above. Remarkably, each silk strand is responsible for producing one kernel of corn. So, every strand must be pollinated if we are to get a fully filled cob.

Pollination is simply a numbers game. Something in the region of two to five million pollen grains are produced by each tassel, which equates to around a thousand pollen grains for every silk – and it only takes one of them to pollinate! And yet, despite this, perfect pollination is far from a given.

Corn cob that misses kernels because of bad pollination. Credit: Radovan1/Shutterstock
Corn cob that misses kernels because of bad pollination. Credit: Radovan1/Shutterstock

Plant in a Block Pattern

Farmers achieve well-filled cobs because their fields are on a far bigger scale than any garden. Rows and rows of corn, swaying and jostling together in the breeze, ensure there’s rarely an issue with pollen distribution.

Gardeners don’t have it so easy, but we can begin helping ourselves by at least planting in a block formation rather than in long rows. Around 97% of the silks on a plant are pollinated as a result of pollen produced by other plants, so if we were to plant in a row, the opportunity for the silks to intercept pollen of any kind would be dramatically reduced. Most gardeners won’t grow more than a modest block of, say, 10 to 50 plants, so achieving a meaningful block is always going to be a challenge, so let’s look at the next step.

Corn planted in a block in a home garden. Credit: Duncan Kelley/Shutterstock

Shake the Corn Stalks to Help Pollen Spread

Corn tassels are at their peak when the anthers dangling down along them are a bright, creamy yellow. Drifts of pollen are released every time the anthers are disturbed and we can use this to our advantage. 

If conditions are calm when the pollen is ready, help things along by gently shaking the stalks of the plants. This mimics the wind and will release clouds of the pollen to float down to the silks below. The silks tend to mature a few days later than the tassels, and even silks on the same cob emerge in succession, starting with those lower down and finishing with those at the tip of the cob. So, shake your plants every few days for as long as the tassels are viable to increase the chances of every silk being pollinated. 

Pollen is at its best around mid-morning – once any dew has evaporated but before it gets too warm. Pollen becomes less viable above 90F or 32C, so if you regularly get these kinds of temperatures, the relative cool of the morning offers the best chances of finding pollen in its prime. If you aren’t around in the mornings, then shake your corn in the evening once things have cooled off a bit.

Hand Pollinate to Guarantee Success

To absolutely guarantee kernel-crammed cobs, you can also manually pollinate them. Carefully detach a tassel from the top of the plant – scissors may be best to keep the pollen from being jolted free. Then dust the tassel back and forth over the silks, taking care to cover every single strand. Repeat this process every few days, again, taking the time to reach all the silks and using fresh, pollen-filled tassels.

Watch the video below to see how to hand pollinate corn.

The silks themselves have a relatively high water content, which means the best way to ensure they successfully emerge and then remain as receptive as possible is to keep your plants properly watered. If it’s dry, thoroughly soak the soil at least once a week.

The silks will dry out once their job is done, and then all that’s left to do is wait for those kernels to swell. Eventually, the silks will turn completely brown and brittle. Then, to tell if sweet corn is ready to pick, gently peel back enough of the husk to expose some of the kernels beneath. Sink a fingernail into one of the kernels, and if the liquid that comes out is nice and creamy, you’re good to go!

See the Almanac’s Guide to Growing Corn if you need information on how to plant, care for, and harvest sweet corn.

About The Author

Catherine Boeckmann

Catherine Boeckmann loves nature, stargazing, and gardening so it’s not surprising that she and The Old Farmer’s Almanac found each other. She leads digital content for the Almanac website, and is also a certified master gardener in the state of Indiana. Read More from Catherine Boeckmann