Let’s talk realistically about gardening on a budget. Specifically gardening in a small space as a renter on a shoestring. You might think small space = lower costs as there’s less physical area to fill, and in some ways that’s true. But no matter the scale of your space, gardening can feel like an indulgent hobby in an already expensive city, one that becomes increasingly inaccessible if you want a life and hobbies outside of gardening as well. And if you’re just getting started or recently moved to a new garden, the upfront costs can feel overwhelming: tools, pots, trays, compost, mulch, grit, seeds, gloves, watering cans, and of course every gardener’s kryptonite, the lure of new plants.
I’ve been gardening as a renter for about ten years, and it’s my second year in my current space, a tiny flat in Hackney (you might have read about my window box gardening efforts at my last flat). Unlike renters, homeowners have the luxury of time. They can spend a few seasons, years even, getting to know their garden before investing, slowly developing the garden as a naturally evolving organic process. As renters, our garden stewardship is a little more precarious.
A quick search on Rightmove shows that of the 813 properties currently available to rent in the borough of Hackney, only 203 have access to gardens (that includes private gardens, communal spaces or balconies), and most are priced far beyond the reach the average renter. Competition for these properties is fierce. If you are one of the lucky few to get your mitts on a rental property with a garden, the duration of your stay there is never a given, and actually gardening it can still feel like an impossible privilege.
So how do you make the best of a garden on a budget if you only have a year or two to enjoy it before you’ll move on (or the landlord hikes up your rent)? The most vital lesson I’ve learned is patience. Resisting the urge to fill my garden with impulse buys and enjoying the journey for what it is – gappy beds, empty pots and all. To see my garden as a creative process, not a shopping list.