yes. they needed some type of vegetable
Corn, Potatoes, Grain
by learning how to grow crops in the Australian atmosphere and many more reasons
the settlers grew corn, tobacco, rice, grains,
Asia
Native Americans first taught European settlers to grow corn in the early 17th century, particularly in the regions of New England and the Chesapeake. The Powhatan Confederacy taught English settlers in Virginia, while the Wampanoag tribe shared agricultural techniques with the Pilgrims in Massachusetts around 1620. Corn, or maize, became a staple crop for the settlers, significantly influencing their survival and agricultural practices.
corn
Native Americans taught European settlers to grow corn in the early 17th century, particularly around the time of the Jamestown settlement in 1607. Indigenous peoples had cultivated corn for thousands of years before European contact, and they shared their knowledge of agricultural techniques with the newcomers. This exchange was crucial for the settlers' survival and adaptation to the New World.
Australia wasn't a particularly easy place to be for the settlers that came there. The climate was so vastly different from what they were used to, that they didn't know how to grow their crops and many people died to some diseases. It was very difficult for them to survive there.
Corn. The Native Americans taught them how to grow corn. Corn is a North American plant and until Europeans arrived they didn't know about corn and several other plants.
The Powhatan taught them to grow corn.
in the late summer/early fall
Jamestown early settlers faced harsh winters and were unable to grow the food they need to survive.