this post was submitted on 24 Apr 2026
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cross-posted from: https://awful.systems/post/8068330

This is a 50sqm balcony/terrace on the 2nd (3rd American) floor of a rental apartment building. I immediately knew we had to take the apartment, because having a balcony garden was my number 1 wish. In that sense, we definitely got super lucky.

This is year 4 of the garden, and it feels like we've reached "routine" with it. In the first year, we lugged about 2.5 cubic meters of soil up there to fill all the pots. From June-October, this space is enough to fill 100% of our (two people) vegetable needs.

Unsurprisingly, this is way too much to water by hand every day, not to mention when we're not home for some days/weeks. The balcony is also south-facing, and it gets hot in the summer (seriously, I have burnt my feet on the stones before).

Unfortunately, there's also no water outlet on the terrace itself, and the landlord said "no" to putting one there (which was expected, the way the house/apartment is built is not really suitable for that).

Our solution has been to put two 300l rain tanks on the balcony (atop of load bearing walls). They get filled by a hose from the kitchen tap whenever required. The barrels are connected by a second hose. In the one in the greenhouse, a rain barrel pump sucks water out, into a watering computer and optionally to a hose for manual watering.

From the watering computer, two watering circuits start; originally the plan was to distinguish between plants that constantly needed a bit of water, and ones that preferred a lot of water occasionally (e.g. the citrus plants); in practice, it turned out to be easier to just always water everything a bit. Oh well.

The watering computer itself it pretty dumb / not connected to an app or the like; it just opens the valves every 8 hours for (in the summer) 3 minutes each time. That's mostly OK. On super hot days, I sometimes start a fourth round of watering in the early afternoon.

The pump is however plugged into a Zigbee-enabled smart socket, which is controlled by an automation via HomeAssistant (so, all-locally, thankfully). The main purpose of this is an automation that disables the pump when there has been a lot of rain in the past 24hrs, or a moderate amount of rain in the past 8 hours. Not that important when we are home, but usually extends the number of days we can be away from home by 2-3 days for a full filling of the tanks.

Finally, here's some pictures and a video from the past couple of years. I think this year is the first year where no new pots were added, and we needed to buy hardly any new soil (the compost bin has really been worth it in that regard, as well!)

Happy to answer any questions!!

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[–] gingersaffronapricat@lemmy.world 2 points 23 minutes ago (1 children)

Your set up is so cool! I’m looking at it to see what i can learn. That grid support system looks great. What plants do you like to use it for?

[–] smiletolerantly@awful.systems 1 points 2 minutes ago

Thanks :) Ah, you mean this one?

I built that last year specifically for our paprika (capsicum? never sure what the English word is. Web search says "pointed peppers"? Not hot though).

The previous years, every time around August the twigs would be full of large, heavy, but unripe fruit. Inevitably, we'd get windy weather and a third of the twigs would break off. The soil in those pots is not very deep (15cm, ca), so the trellis needed to be able to stand on its own. I really like the outcome, no breakage last year :)

The original idea came from here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wFWNV1V0x3o, adapted for our situation. The twigs end up kind of laying atop the supports.

Oh, and throwing a plastic foil over it in February/March also worked quite nicely to create a make-shift coldframe!

[–] IMALlama@lemmy.world 2 points 47 minutes ago (1 children)

Very cool setup! When my partner and I moved out on our own our first garden was on an apartment balcony, but our balcony was quite a bit smaller. We still had it covered in pots. Watering was a bit of a chore, but IMO it was worth it.

[–] smiletolerantly@awful.systems 2 points 10 minutes ago

Very nice! Yeah I think you can do a lot with limited space. Ours also for sure isn't as full as it could technically be. Have you upgraded to a "proper" garden then, I take it? 😄

[–] lath@lemmy.world 4 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

I'm being a bit of a pessimist here, but weather predictions are a bit unreliable these days. Spain and Italy just got hit by a surprise massive hailstorm.

Last year I had sudden snow completely cover flowering trees for 2 days and wiped the year's fruit production.

I wouldn't trust long-term forecasts too much. The climate's already too screwed to be stable.

[–] HasturInYellow@lemmy.world 3 points 2 hours ago

I planted stuff too, and like half my shit just got blasted by a random frost and a hailstorm.

How did we survive so long? Oh right, we could farm practically as much as space as we wanted and not just 2sqft