From Mess to Magic: Transforming the Forgotten Corner

By

·

3–5 minutes

Every garden has that corner. You know the one – the neglected patch that’s part compost heap, part dog toilet, part existential crisis. For months, the back corner of my garden sat there looking sad and unloved: a tangle of weeds, drooping tree branches, and a few of Odie’s “presents” hidden in the shade.

A neglected garden corner with overgrown grass, weeds, and two terracotta pots, one empty and the other with a small plant, surrounded by a wooden fence and a house in the background.
A horrible corner needing some love

A neglected garden corner with overgrown grass, weeds, and a small terracotta pot, bordered by a wooden fence.
“Don’t look at me!!”, it screams

But one sunny Saturday, I decided enough was enough. That forgotten corner was going to earn its keep – it was time to turn it into a productive, beautiful veggie corner.

Step 1: Light and air (and fewer dog surprises)

The first job was pruning. The tree above had grown a mess of low-hanging branches that made the whole area feel dark and cramped, like a bad haircut over your eyes. Out came the pruning shears, and after a good session of branch-whacking, the canopy lifted and the space instantly felt brighter and more open.

Then came the less glamorous part: poop patrol. Odie had clearly been treating the area as his private restroom, so there was some careful cleanup before I could face the soil itself.

Step 2: Starting fresh

I pulled up the weeds and cleared the pebbles and stones, then used a shovel to turn over the soil. I dug down to create a shallow bed, giving the area a clean slate.

Step 3: Rejuvenating the soil

With the weeds gone and the bed cleared, it was time to bring the soil back to life. I mixed in some Seasol soil wetter and Seasol compost, turning it through with the shovel to help loosen things up and reintroduce some nutrients. The difference was instant – the soil went from dry and compacted to dark, crumbly and full of promise.

Step 4: Setting up the patch

Next came the hardware. I picked up a new Jack 900mm Oxyshield Podium Landscape Ring from Bunnings (basically a stylish metal garden bed that looks like it means business) to match my existing landscape rings, and paired it with a large terracotta pot I already had lying around.

A metal garden bed installed in a sunny corner of a garden, surrounded by freshly turned soil and a wooden fence in the background.
Nestling in my new Jack Oxyshield rust ring.

A garden corner being prepared for planting, featuring a metal landscape ring filled with soil, surrounded by plants, a terracotta pot, and gardening tools on the ground.
Preparing the new veggie corner with a 900mm rust ring, filled with nutrient-rich potting mix and compost.

Both got nestled snugly into the new soil bed, but it took a bit of time to get them perfectly level. Picture me crouched down with a spirit level, squinting and muttering like a deranged surveyor. Eventually, I got there – and it was deeply satisfying.

A metal garden bed with a level tool resting on the edge, set against a wooden fence, partially filled with soil.
Getting this level was SO ANNOYING. Levelling one side unlevelled the other etc – but we got there in the end!

Once they were sitting level, I filled them up with my favourite Osmocote Tomato & Veg potting mix, a good dose of Seasol compost, and a sprinkle of RichGro Blood and Bone for an extra nutrient boost. The smell wasn’t glamorous, but the plants are going to love it.

A circular metal garden bed filled with dark, damp soil, positioned against a wooden fence in a backyard.
Soil ready for seeds – the fun part!

(For a more detailed guide on how to start your urban patch from scratch, check out my Starter Guides here – including how to get started for less than $20!)

Step 5: Planting the dream team

With everything in place, I planted seeds of my chosen mix of edibles and flowers, selected for the slide into summer:

  • Totem tomato (this one was a seedling I’d gotten a headstart on in a separate pot)
  • Basil
  • Mini bell capsicum
  • Little finger eggplant
  • Lettuce
  • And for colour and pollinator power: marigold, nasturtium and calendula
A view of a newly prepared garden bed with a small potted plant in the center and various seed packets arranged around it, set on a layer of mulch.
Pro tip: instead of marking everything out with labels, I like to take photos of the seed packets in the pot – so I can refer back to the photo if I can’t remember what is what!

A terracotta pot filled with dark soil, featuring seed packets for marigold, basil, and calendula nestled among the mulch, placed against a wooden fence.
Classic summer combo – tomato, basil, marigold.

They all went in chaos-style together, soon to be a cheerful jumble of veggies, herbs and blooms that should keep the bees happy and dinners tasty.

A metal landscape ring filled with dark soil, surrounded by scattered seed packets for flowers and vegetables, on a garden floor with grass and foliage.
Some extra flowers around the edge, let’s see if these sprout or get immediately trampled by Odie…

Step 6: Beer, obviously

A hand holding a can of 'Pickle Beer' in a garden setting with greenery and brick pathways in the background.
Cracking open the post-gardening beer – is there anything more satisfying?

Once the last seed was tucked in and the tools were packed away, I cracked open a well-earned beer and admired the view. That scrappy, unloved corner is now one of my favourite spots in the garden – proof that with a bit of effort (and a lot of weeding), even the roughest corners can become something beautiful.

The joy of small-space reclamation

There’s something deeply satisfying about reclaiming small, forgotten spaces. It’s not just about tidying up – it’s about possibility. Turning a dead zone into a living, growing patch reminds me why I love urban gardening in the first place: the act of coaxing life out of the unlikeliest spots, and the nurturing of new starts.

A sunny garden corner featuring a large circular metal garden bed and a smaller terracotta pot, surrounded by light landscaping and wooden fencing.
And now, the patience game as the new seeds push through!

Leave a comment