When to Plant Papaya in Brisbane — Subtropical Guide
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Fast-growing tropical herbaceous plant (not a true tree) that fruits within 10-12 months from seed. In Australia, 'papaya' refers to red/orange-fleshed varieties and 'pawpaw' to yellow-fleshed types - both are Carica papaya. Strictly tropical/warm subtropical. Frost kills them outright. Extremely productive when conditions are right - a single plant can produce 30-50 fruit per year. Short-lived (3-5 years productive life) but easily replaced from seed.
How to Grow Papaya in Subtropical Australia
When to Plant
Plant September-December. Need full warm season for establishment before winter.
- Soil
- Rich, well-drained soil. Cannot tolerate waterlogging. Raised mounds in heavy soil. Sandy loam with organic matter ideal.
- pH Range
- 5.5-6.5
- Sunlight
- Full sun, maximum heat. Sheltered from wind (large leaves are easily damaged).
Companion plants: Banana, Sweet potato, Tropical ground covers
Avoid planting near: Waterlogged areas, Windy exposed positions
Subtropical Growing Tips for Papaya
Recommended Varieties
- Southern Red
- Solo types
- Guinea Gold
Key Challenges
- Winter cold stops growth
- Frost kills plants outright
- Slower fruiting than tropics
Pro Tips
- SEQ grows good papayas in sheltered positions.
- Protect from any frost - even 0°C for 30 minutes can kill.
- North-facing wall with overhead protection ideal.
Harvesting Papaya
When ready: Skin changes from green to yellow (amount varies by variety). Fruit gives slightly when pressed. Harvest at 1/4 to 1/2 colour change for fruit fly management and ripen indoors.
How to harvest: Twist and pull, or cut stem. Handle carefully - ripe papaya bruises easily.
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