November 24, 2024

VIDEO: Hand Pollinating Corn for PERFECT Ears


Corn pollination is a weird process unlike many other annual crops you’ll grow in your garden. It’s a wind pollinated plant, meaning our beneficial pollinators don’t really play a part in the process. So if you’re growing a small amount of sweet corn, this is a foolproof method for corn pollination that takes under three minutes.

Be sure to check out my other videos on how to grow corn, even in small spaces!

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27 thoughts on “VIDEO: Hand Pollinating Corn for PERFECT Ears

  1. So you can use one male part to pollinate the same plants – even if the male and female parts are on the same plant?
    I have a tiny corn crop of only three plants, so just one male part from any of the plants will pollinate all three?

  2. Does it matter if the corn is pollinated by another type of corn taste wise? I’m growing popcorn and sweet corn. I’m thinking it will only effect the genetics of the next generation, but I’m not collecting seeds.

  3. I’ve got my first tassel on a stalk of corn. No silks yet. Would I be able to shake the tassel of pollen into a paper envelope and later use that to hand pollinate, once my silks have formed? Or will the tassel of pollen remain for long enough? This is my first time growing corn. I’m very much still a beginner!

  4. My corn patch is very interesting. The smaller corn stalk about 2 feet already have male tassel and corn silk BUT my nice big tall very healthy looking corn stalk about 4ft high does not have anything (no male tassel, no corn silk) just nice healthy looking stalk….so what happen and what do I need to do? Thanks.

  5. Is that dragonfruit cactus back there? I actually have over a hundred corn plants, so I'll probably be fine, but it really is a small area, so why not be thorough. It's basically like, imagine the lawn area around a city corner lot. I've pretty much filled it with food plants. It's amazing how people will just waste their land growing grass when they could get food for way less work tbh.

  6. Lol you dont have the smallest. I only have 3 stalks and one is a runt. First year trying things out, learning along the way. I have shedding tassels but dont see any silks…

  7. Just a little reminder. Not all tassels emerge at the same time and not all silks appear at once. It's true that the tassels fade after 10 days, but that depends on when they emerged. Younger tassels produce pollen after the older ones have stopped

  8. Very handy video! We planted 6 kernels, 4 successfully grown, and my dad just told me to "shake the tassels"! Didn't know what he was talking about, so found your video! All makes sense now!

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