A bag of potting mix with seed packets for beetroot, silverbeet, carrot, radish, and chives displayed on top.

Urban Gardening for Beginners: 4 Essentials to Get Growing Fast

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5–7 minutes

The internet and gardening communities can make things very complicated. Do you have the right fertiliser composition, sun direction, companion plants etc. But the truth is, whether you’ve got a sunny balcony, a scrappy courtyard, or just a windowsill and some hope, there’s really only four basic things every edible garden needs:

  1. 🌱 The Plants
  2. 🪣 Their Home
  3. 🪱 The Dirt
  4. 🌞 The Environment

I’ve broken down each into a ✅“Must Have” and an 🫖“Optional, Don’t Sweat It Yet” section – the goal here is to just get started and you can add more things as you learn!

🌱 1. The Plants – What To Grow First

A bag of potting mix with seed packets for beetroot, silverbeet, carrot, radish, and chives displayed on top.
Grow what you like to eat – I’m starting this batch off with beetroot, silverbeet, carrot, radish, and chives

What are you going to grow? Start with one or two easy edibles you actually like to eat – think herbs, greens, or cherry tomatoes. You’ll learn as you grow (and probably kill a few along the way – it’s all part of the fun).

✅ Must Have – Easy Edibles You’ll Actually Eat

  • Pick 1–3 plants you actually like to eat (e.g. basil, lettuce, parsley)
  • Choose easy, forgiving plants like herbs or leafy greens – check out our Beginner Friendly Plant recommendations
  • Buy seedlings (baby plants) from the nursery to keep things simple and get growing fast

🫖 Optional Extras

  • Growing from seed (it’s cheaper, but trickier)
  • Companion planting or plant families
  • Heritage varieties (cool, but not essential)
  • Planning out your whole harvest for the year – just start with something now

💡Urban Patch Tip: It’s way more motivating to start with something that grows fast. Herbs or lettuces can be ready for harvest in a few weeks. A capsicum? She’s more of a long-game diva.

🪣 2. Their Home – Containers Are a Flexible Urban Home

Seedling pots labeled with various vegetables including beetroot, carrot, silver beet, and radish, arranged on a tray with decorative pebbles beside them.
Upcycled purple garden pots and an egg carton – the first home for my beetroot, carrot, silverbeet, and radish

Your plant needs a home – either a container, or straight into the ground. Every plant needs a place to put down roots – whether that’s a pot on your balcony or a patch of soil in your backyard, the right home makes all the difference.

🌿 Option 1: In a Container

Great for balconies, rentals, or when your soil is basically just construction rubble. Also great for moving around to catch the sun.

✅ Must Have

  • A pot or bucket with drainage holes
  • Big enough for roots – about the size of a loaf of bread for herbs
  • Potting mix (not garden soil)

🫖 Optional Extras

  • Pretty matching pots
  • Raised garden beds
  • Self-watering or vertical planters

💡Urban Patch Tip: Almost anything can be a pot if water can drain out and your plant fits. Yep, even a recycled Farmers Union yoghurt container with holes poked in the bottom! Oh – also label your container if you’ve got a few on the go so you know what you’ve planted…nobody wants to excitedly harvest their coriander and realise too late it’s actually parsley.

🪱 Option 2: Straight into the Dirt

If you’ve got earth, use it! But think like a plant: is this a good spot to live?

✅ Must Have

  • A spot with at least 4–6 hours of sun
  • Somewhere not too compacted – avoid old driveways or rocky rubble
  • Clear access to water (tap, hose, or watering can nearby)
  • A space you can walk around and reach without stepping on all your plants

🫖 Optional Extras

  • Fencing or barriers if you’ve got pets (looking at you, Odie 🐶)
  • Defined borders with bricks, wood, or edging
  • A path using stepping stones or mulch to avoid compacting the soil
  • A garden layout plan (you’ll probably change it anyway)

💡Urban Patch Tip: The best garden bed is the one you’ll actually visit. Pick a spot you walk past often – you’ll remember to water, weed, and harvest more often.

🪱 3. The Dirt – Use the Right Soil from Day One

A close-up view of a circular planter filled with dark soil and various small green seedlings, including herbs, with a sprig of thyme visible on the left side.
Filled up my rusty-look planter with a mix of potting mix and compost

Healthy plants need healthy soil. Whether you’re filling a pot or digging a patch in the backyard, healthy dirt is the unsung hero of your garden. Good soil = happy roots = tasty harvests.

🌿 Option 1: You’re Using Pots or Containers

✅ Must Have

  • Use potting mix, not garden soil (it’s lighter, drains well, and your plant roots can breathe)
  • Check that it’s labelled for edibles or vegetables if possible

🫖 Optional Extras

  • Add a handful of compost or worm castings to boost nutrients
  • Mix in a bit of perlite or coir if your mix feels too heavy
  • Buy the fancy organic stuff (it’s great, but not required)

💡Urban Patch Tip: Start with basic potting mix. Your plants won’t know if it came from the budget aisle or the premium blend.

🌏 Option 2: You’re Planting Straight into the Ground

✅ Must Have

  • Test your soil:
    • Dig down and feel it. Does it crumble like chocolate cake? You’re golden.
    • If it’s clay (sticky and heavy) or sandy (drains too fast), you’ll want to mix in some organic matter
  • Add compost if you can – even just a bag or two will help
  • Clear the area of weeds and grass before planting
  • Loosen the soil – use a fork or spade to break it up so roots can grow easily

🫖 Optional Extras

  • Soil testing kits to check pH or contamination
  • Mulch to retain water and keep weeds down
  • A layer of worm castings or aged manure
  • Raised beds (if the soil’s really rough)

💡Urban Patch Tip: Don’t stress if your soil isn’t perfect. Just loosen it, add some compost, and get planting. Nature’s been growing stuff in dirt long before garden centres existed.

🌞 4. The Environment – Sun, Water, Weather

Close-up of a blue planter with young edible plants growing in soil, featuring a plant tag in the corner, placed on a wooden surface.
A sunny corner for my little mustard greens!

Where you place your plant makes a big difference. Sun, water, wind, and temperature all shape your plant’s chances – understanding your little microclimate can turn guesswork into growth. But the biggest factor? The sun.

✅ Must Have – Did We Mention The Sun?

  • At least 4 hours of sun a day (most herbs and veggies love sun)
  • Water your plant regularly (every 2 days, or when the soil is feeling dry) – stick your finger into the soil up to your first finger joint to check the soil is actually wet, not just the surface of the soil
  • A spot where you’ll see it daily (so you don’t forget it exists)

🫖 Optional Extras

  • Wind protection or shade cloth
  • Water timers or irrigation systems
  • Pest management plans (just keep an eye out for now)

🎉 That’s It — You’re Officially a Gardener

You don’t need a “green thumb” or a perfect setup. You just need:

  • A plant
  • A container
  • Some soil
  • A sunny-ish spot

And a little curiosity.

Mistakes are part of the process. Plants will wilt. The dog might dig one up. But something will grow – and when it does, you’ll never look at a salad the same way again.

See our recommendations for Beginner Friendly Plants, or check out our Guide to Getting Started on a Budget to see how to get going with just $20!

Happy growing!
— L (and Odie 🐾)

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