I’m Huw Richards and today I’m sharing 17 of my favourite, zero-cost gardening hacks so you can grow more with less effort. These practical tips come from years of hands-on vegetable gardening and from my new book Grow Food for Free. Whether you’re focused on Gardening Seeds Plants Flowers Vegetables Herbs in raised beds, containers or a tiny balcony, these steps will save you time, money and effort.
Step 1: Make durable plant labels from recycled tubs
Cut old ice cream, yogurt or cream pots into 1.5–2 cm strips and write on the blank side with a permanent marker. They’re waterproof, reusable for many seasons and perfect for indoor and outdoor seed trays.
Step 2: Grow potatoes under a mulch blanket
Place seed potatoes on the soil surface of a raised bed and bury them under a thick layer of straw, hay, leaves or woodchip. When shoots appear, add more mulch. Harvest a couple of weeks after flowering by pulling back the mulch.
Step 3: Use bramble canes as a slug fence
Cut thorny bramble canes into 30 cm lengths and lay them around seedlings. Stack two or three for extra protection—this won’t be perfect, but it deters a lot of slugs.
Step 4: Sow and transplant in the rain
Sow seeds or move seedlings just before or during heavy rain. You’ll save watering time and preserve stored water—nature does the work for you.
Step 5: Build seed trays from pallets
Repurpose heat-treated (H-T) pallets to create plastic-free seed trays. Use spare nails or reclaimed timber to make frames of any size—ideal for transplanting and reducing plastic waste.
Step 6: Create perfect seed trenches with a bamboo strip
Lay a piece of bamboo (or a broom handle) across your raised bed just under its width, press to the desired depth and lift. You’ll have a straight trench for uniform sowing—ideal when planting Gardening Seeds Plants Flowers Vegetables Herbs in rows.
Step 7: Make a straight line with string and sticks
Tie string between two sticks and stretch it taut across the bed. This gives you a guide for sowing or transplanting seedlings in a perfectly straight line.
Step 8: Multi-sew to save space and compost
Sow clumps of several seeds per module (eg. beetroot, radish, turnips). Transplant the clumps and let seedlings push apart as they grow—faster sowing and less compost per plant.
Step 9: Use cardboard tubes as biodegradable pots
Fill toilet-roll or kitchen-roll tubes with homemade compost and sow peas or beans. Plant the whole tube in the ground to avoid transplant shock—the tube breaks down naturally.
Step 10: Transplant directly from a compost-filled gutter
Fill an old rain gutter with compost, sow seedlings, then slide them into a trench when transplanting. This works brilliantly for peas, lettuce and salad greens.
Step 11: Repurpose Christmas tree branches as pea supports
After the holidays, collect discarded fir branches and use them as low-cost supports for peas and sweet peas—sturdy and biodegradable.
Step 12: Move from annual plans to monthly planting plans
Plan month-by-month instead of by the year. This helps you fill gaps quickly, schedule successive sowings and squeeze two or three harvests from the same patch during a season—especially handy when managing Gardening Seeds Plants Flowers Vegetables Herbs in tight spaces.
Step 13: Improve carrot and parsnip germination with a plank
Water after sowing, then lay a plank over the row to reduce evaporation. Remove it once seedlings appear—this keeps the soil consistently moist during the critical germination period.
Step 14: Force tomato roots deeper with a watering pause
After transplanting and a deep initial water, don’t water again for seven days. The slight stress encourages roots to search deeper for water, creating a stronger, more resilient plant.
Step 15: Grow dried peas and beans from your pantry
Don’t throw away dried peas and beans—soak them for an hour and sow. They’ll give you peas, pea shoots for salads, or mature beans, extending your seed resources for free.
Step 16: Make weekly weeding and use sun to your advantage
Set aside one flexible weekly weeding session. Weed in the heat of the day so pulled plants wilt on the surface and break down in place. This saves trips to the compost and recycles nutrients back into beds.
Step 17: Source and use free woodchip for paths and mulch
Get free woodchip from local arborists to create paths. After one to two years the chip composes down—scoop it up for mulch and replenish the path. This is permaculture-friendly, multifunctional gardening.
Step 18: Two simple mind-hacks to keep you productive
- Focus on one big task: Pick the highest-priority job and work on it until it’s done—large tasks cleared make the rest feel achievable.
- Do all 5-minute jobs first: Make a list of quick tasks and knock them off to build momentum and feel productive fast.
Final tips and encouragement
These 17 hacks (plus the two mental tricks) are designed to help you grow more with less expense and less effort. Try a couple this week—label seeds with recycled pots, plant under mulch, or build a pallet seed tray—and notice how much simpler Gardening Seeds Plants Flowers Vegetables Herbs becomes.
If you want more low-cost techniques, my book Grow Food for Free dives deeper into sustainable, money-saving gardening methods. Which hack will you try first? Let me know and start small: pick one step, do it well, and build from there.

