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Not everyone has room for a full garden, but did you know you can still grow some of your own food with limited space?
Here’s your guide to a quick and easy balcony garden. You can even grow your food in the city and make some extra room in your budget.
In general herbs are relatively easy to grow and plants that have vines take up little space because they can grow vertically. Here are some of the plants that are most likely to grow easily on a balcony:
Herbs tend to like full or partial sunlight (at least four hours), so consider positioning them on the sunniest part of your balcony. You could also keep them inside by a window and leave the balcony for the plants that require bigger pots and a little bit more space.
Most greens, on the other hand, can thrive in the shade, as can root vegetables.
Before you plant your seeds and put them outside, find out if it’s a good idea to start the seedlings inside and then transfer them to the balcony. Balcony Container Gardening has a good guide for this.
If your balcony gets six or more hours of sun (referred to as full sun), you’re in luck and you’ll be able to grow quite a variety of plants. Three to six hours qualifies as partial sun and 1.5 to four hours is considered partial shade. Anything less than three hours is considered full shade.
If the sunlight isn’t direct and it’s coming through tree leaves or it’s obstructed in some other similar way, it’s filtered (or dappled) light. There are products, like the SunCalc, that can help you determine exactly how much light your balcony gets in a day.
Seed packets will generally tell you the amount of sunlight necessary for a plant to grow and thrive. You’ll also see ideal climate information.
These bits of information will allow you to piece together a garden that works where you live (and may even drive your decision when you begin looking for another home, if being able to grow certain types of your own food is especially important to you).
How do the watering and fertilizing requirements combined with any pruning needs for the foods you hope to grow compare to the amount of time you want to spend on your garden?
For example, if you have a very hot, sunny balcony, will you want to water especially thirsty plants twice a day?
No matter how committed you plan to be to your garden, it’s smart to start small. You’ll be less likely to get overwhelmed by the maintenance and get a true feel for how much you enjoy tending a garden before you devote too much money or energy to it.
The climate on your balcony may not be the same as the climate on the ground. Is it windier? Shadier? Hotter or colder? Factor these things in when choosing your plants.
You may need hardier plants to withstand the wind that whips through at your apartment’s height, for example. Burpee’s Growing Zone Location map is a good place to start.
If you’ve got the space and the sunlight for what you want to grow, there’s one more thing you should check before you get started—whether you’re allowed to have a balcony garden at all.
Check in with the management office or landlord where you live and find out if there are any rules against having a garden on your balcony.
Nothing would be more disappointing than getting everything set up only to find out that you had to get rid of it.
In some cases, you don’t even need seeds. Take a look at Black Thumb Gardener’s post on plants you can grow from kitchen scraps.
The layout of your garden will ultimately depend on where the sunniest spots are, how much furniture you have on the balcony, how much space you need for entertaining guests, and how you can arrange your containers in a way that allows you to still walk around and water them with ease.
Another tip is to layer your plants with the tallest toward the back, near a wall, with the shorter ones in front. It’s easier to water them and more aesthetically pleasing.
Planning ahead is perhaps the most important tip in your guide to a quick and easy balcony garden. You’ll need to take space and the amount of sunlight the area gets, of course, but you should be realistic about how much time and energy you want to commit to your garden so you’re not disappointed or overwhelmed.
Instead, you can celebrate your health and the delicious food you’re growing right outside your door!
Finally, before we wrap up this post, I’m curious:
Do you currently have plants at home? Which are your favorite plant varieties?
We’d love to know more about your garden and the plants you have, please share below!