Starting a vegetable garden from scratch is one of the most rewarding decisions a beginner gardener can make. The idea of growing your own food — stepping outside and harvesting tomatoes, herbs, lettuce, and beans you planted and tended yourself — quickly moves from novelty to one of the most satisfying routines of the growing season.
But if you have never done it before, the process can feel overwhelming. What do you plant first? Where do you put the garden? What kind of soil do you need? How much sun is enough? How do you know when to water?
This guide answers all of those questions in the right order. By the time you finish reading, you will have a clear, step-by-step plan for starting your first vegetable garden — from choosing the right location to harvesting your first crops — regardless of your available space, budget, or experience level.
Are You Ready to Start? A 5-Question Planning Checklist
Before you buy a single seed or move a shovel of soil, answer these five questions. Each one shapes a critical decision that will determine how successful your first season is:
| Question | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| How much sunlight does your chosen spot receive per day? | Most vegetables need 6–8 hours of direct sun — this single factor determines what you can grow |
| How much space do you have available? | Determines your garden type: in-ground, raised bed, or containers |
| What vegetables does your family actually eat? | Only grow what you will harvest and use — wasted harvests kill motivation |
| What is your average last frost date? | Determines when you can safely plant warm-season crops outdoors |
| How much time per week can you commit to the garden? | Honest time assessment prevents overplanting and abandoned gardens |
Working through these five questions before you do anything else saves considerable time, money, and disappointment. The most common first-garden failures are caused by planting too much, in the wrong location, at the wrong time. This checklist prevents all three.
Why Grow Your Own Vegetables?
Before getting into the how, it is worth spending a moment on the why — because understanding the full range of benefits reinforces the commitment it takes to succeed in that first season.
Fresh flavor that store-bought cannot match. A tomato harvested ripe from the vine and eaten the same day bears almost no resemblance to a tomato picked underripe, shipped across the country, and ripened in a warehouse. The same is true of sweet corn, peas, lettuce, and herbs. Growing your own food reconnects you to what freshness actually tastes like.
Significant cost savings over time. A packet of tomato seeds costs $3–$5 and can produce dozens of plants. A single established tomato plant in a garden can yield 10–15 pounds of fruit over a season. The economics of a well-planned vegetable garden become favorable quickly, particularly for crops like tomatoes, herbs, leafy greens, and peppers that are expensive at the grocery store.
Control over what goes into your food. When you grow your own vegetables, you decide whether to use pesticides, synthetic fertilizers, or none of the above. For families who prioritize organic produce, a home vegetable garden is the most reliable way to know exactly how your food was grown.
Mental health and physical wellbeing. Regular time outdoors, physical activity at a gentle pace, and the psychological satisfaction of nurturing living things all contribute to measurable improvements in wellbeing. Gardening is consistently ranked among the most satisfying hobbies precisely because the results are tangible and edible.
Step 1: Choose the Right Location
Location is the single most important decision in starting a vegetable garden. A perfect location with average soil and basic care will outperform a poor location with expensive amendments and attentive watering every time.
Sunlight Requirements
Most vegetable crops are sun-hungry. The minimum for productive vegetable growing is six hours of direct sunlight per day — eight hours or more produces significantly better results for fruiting crops like tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, and squash.
Sunlight by crop category:
| Sunlight Available | What You Can Grow Successfully |
|---|---|
| 8+ hours full sun | Everything: tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, squash, beans, corn, melons |
| 6–8 hours full sun | Most vegetables; fruiting crops may produce slightly less |
| 4–6 hours partial shade | Leafy greens, spinach, lettuce, kale, chard, herbs like parsley and cilantro |
| Under 4 hours shade | Very limited: some herbs, microgreens; not recommended for vegetable garden |
Before committing to a location, observe it throughout the day on a sunny day. Shade patterns change with the seasons — a spot that gets morning sun but afternoon shade from a fence or tree may appear sunny but actually receives far less than it seems.
Other Location Factors
Drainage: Avoid any area where water pools after rain. Waterlogged soil suffocates roots and invites disease. If drainage is a problem throughout your yard, raised beds are the solution — they drain freely by gravity regardless of the native soil beneath.
Access to water: You will water frequently, especially during establishment and dry spells. Choosing a location close to a water source — a hose connection or rain barrel — removes a significant practical friction point that causes new gardeners to underwater their crops.
Protection from wind: Strong winds damage young plants, accelerate soil drying, and reduce pollinator activity. A location with some wind protection — a fence, hedge, or wall on the prevailing wind side — benefits most vegetable gardens.
Proximity to the kitchen: This sounds trivial but is not. Gardens that are convenient to walk to get harvested more regularly. Herbs and salad greens especially benefit from being close enough that grabbing a handful before dinner feels effortless.
Step 2: Choose Your Garden Type
Once you have identified a suitable location, choose the garden format that best fits your space, soil, and situation.
In-Ground Garden Beds
The traditional approach: cultivating directly in native soil, amended with compost and organic matter. In-ground beds are best suited to:
- Locations with good native soil that drains well
- Gardeners with space for a larger growing area
- Crops that develop deep root systems — carrots, parsnips, potatoes, corn
- Lower-budget starts (no materials to purchase beyond amendments)
The main limitation is soil quality. If your native soil is heavy clay, compacted, rocky, or contaminated, working with it requires significant amendment before it produces well. A soil test from your local cooperative extension service (typically $15–$30) is worth doing before investing in an in-ground bed — it tells you exactly what your soil needs.
Raised Bed Gardens
Raised beds are the most popular choice for new gardeners, and for good reason. They offer complete control over your growing medium, better drainage, warmer soil in spring, fewer weeds, and easier physical access than in-ground beds.
A standard raised bed — 4 feet wide by 8 feet long by 12 inches deep — provides 32 square feet of growing space, enough for a meaningful first garden. The 4-foot width is deliberate: you can reach the center of the bed from either side without stepping in and compacting the soil.
For a complete guide to building raised beds, selecting materials, and creating the ideal soil mix, our raised bed gardening guide covers every detail from construction to planting.
Container Gardens
For gardeners without yard space — those on apartment balconies, patios, or with concrete or paved outdoor areas — containers make a fully productive vegetable garden possible. Many vegetables grow exceptionally well in containers when given the right pot size and soil:
- Tomatoes: Minimum 5-gallon container; 15–20 gallon for indeterminate varieties
- Peppers: 3–5 gallon container
- Lettuce and salad greens: Shallow containers, 6–8 inches deep
- Herbs: Individual 6-inch pots or mixed herb planters
- Cucumbers: 5-gallon minimum with vertical support
- Dwarf beans: 5-gallon container
The critical difference between container gardening and in-ground or raised bed gardening is watering frequency — containers dry out much faster and may need watering daily during hot weather. Choose containers with drainage holes, use high-quality potting mix (never garden soil, which compacts in containers), and be consistent with feeding since container nutrients deplete faster.
Our container gardening for beginners guide covers everything you need to know about growing in pots, from variety selection to watering schedules.
Step 3: Understand and Prepare Your Soil
Soil is the foundation of everything that happens in your vegetable garden. Plants absorb water, nutrients, and oxygen through their roots — and all three of those things are delivered by the soil. Investing time and attention in soil preparation before planting is the single best thing you can do for your garden’s productivity.
What Good Vegetable Garden Soil Looks Like
Ideal vegetable garden soil is:
- Dark in color — indicating good organic matter content
- Loose and crumbly — breaks apart easily in your hand without being dusty
- Well-draining — water moves through it readily without pooling
- Biologically active — earthworms are a positive sign
- Neither too sandy nor too clay-heavy — the ideal is loamy, combining good drainage with water and nutrient retention
How to Improve Your Soil
Regardless of your starting point, compost is the universal soil amendment. Adding 2–4 inches of finished compost and working it into the top 6–8 inches of your growing area improves virtually every soil type: it lightens heavy clay, improves water retention in sandy soil, adds nutrients, and feeds the microbial life that makes those nutrients available to plant roots.
Additional amendments based on your soil type:
| Soil Problem | Amendment | Application Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy clay (compacts, drains poorly) | Compost + coarse sand | 3–4 inches compost; 1–2 inches sand |
| Sandy soil (drains too fast, low nutrients) | Compost + aged manure | 3–4 inches compost; 1–2 inches manure |
| Compacted soil (hard, dense) | Compost + aeration (fork or broadfork) | 4 inches compost; deep fork to 12 inches |
| Low pH (acidic) | Garden lime | Per soil test recommendation |
| High pH (alkaline) | Sulfur or acidic compost | Per soil test recommendation |
For a deep dive into soil science, testing, and amendment strategies, our best soil for vegetable gardens guide covers everything from reading a soil test to building long-term soil fertility.
Step 4: Choose What to Grow
This is where many first-time gardeners go wrong — they plant what looks exciting in the seed catalog rather than what they will actually eat, or they plant too many different things and become overwhelmed managing them all.
The Golden Rules of Crop Selection for Beginners
Rule 1: Only grow what you eat. If your family does not eat eggplant, do not grow eggplant. The most reliable motivation to tend and harvest your garden is the prospect of eating what you have grown.
Rule 2: Start with easy crops. Some vegetables are forgiving, fast-growing, and productive for beginners. Others are finicky, slow, or prone to problems that require experience to manage.
Rule 3: Start small. A 4×8 raised bed or a 10×10 in-ground plot is the right size for a first garden. Too much space leads to too much work, overwhelm, and abandonment.
Best Vegetables for First-Time Gardeners
| Vegetable | Difficulty | Days to Harvest | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lettuce and salad greens | Very Easy | 30–45 days | Cut-and-come-again harvesting; great for small spaces |
| Radishes | Very Easy | 22–30 days | Fastest vegetable from seed to harvest |
| Green beans (bush type) | Easy | 50–60 days | Prolific producers; no staking needed |
| Zucchini / summer squash | Easy | 50–60 days | Highly productive; one or two plants is enough |
| Tomatoes (determinate) | Easy–Medium | 60–80 days | Most rewarding beginner crop; needs staking |
| Herbs (basil, parsley, chives) | Very Easy | 30–60 days | High value per square foot; use daily |
| Cucumbers | Easy | 55–65 days | Productive; train vertically to save space |
| Peppers | Easy–Medium | 70–90 days | Slow to start but productive once established |
| Kale and chard | Easy | 50–60 days | Cut outer leaves; plant produces for months |
| Peas (snap peas) | Easy | 60–70 days | Cool-season crop; plant early spring |
Cool-Season vs. Warm-Season Crops
One of the most important concepts in vegetable gardening is the distinction between cool-season and warm-season crops. Getting this timing wrong is the most common reason new gardeners lose plants.
Cool-season crops grow best in cooler temperatures (45–75°F / 7–24°C) and can tolerate light frost. They are planted in early spring or late summer/fall:
- Lettuce, spinach, kale, chard, arugula
- Peas, broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower
- Carrots, beets, radishes, turnips
Warm-season crops require warm soil and air temperatures to thrive and are damaged or killed by frost. They are not planted outdoors until after your last frost date:
- Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant
- Cucumbers, zucchini, squash, melons
- Beans, corn, basil
Your last frost date is the single most important date on your gardening calendar. Search “last frost date [your city]” or use the Old Farmer’s Almanac frost date calculator to find yours.
Step 5: Plan Your Garden Layout
A little planning before planting prevents the most common layout mistakes: plants shading each other, crops that need frequent harvest buried at the back, and aggressive spreaders taking over neighboring plants.
Basic Layout Principles
Plant tall crops on the north side of the garden (in the Northern Hemisphere) so they do not shade shorter crops. Corn, trellised tomatoes, and tall sunflowers should always go at the north end.
Group plants by water and light needs. Plants that need consistent moisture go together; drought-tolerant herbs go in a different section.
Leave access paths. You need to be able to reach every plant without stepping on the growing area. Plan paths of at least 18 inches between beds or sections.
Account for plant spread. Zucchini, squash, and cucumbers sprawl aggressively. A single zucchini plant can occupy 4–6 square feet. Give them space or train them vertically.
Companion Planting Basics
Companion planting — growing specific plants near each other for mutual benefit — is a proven strategy that improves yields and reduces pest pressure. A few high-value combinations:
| Plant | Best Companion | Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Tomatoes | Basil | Basil may repel thrips and aphids |
| Tomatoes | Marigolds | Deter nematodes in soil; repel some pests |
| Beans | Carrots | Beans fix nitrogen that benefits carrots |
| Cucumbers | Dill | Attracts beneficial insects |
| Squash | Nasturtiums | Trap crop for aphids; keeps them off squash |
| Brassicas | Dill or fennel | Attract parasitic wasps that control cabbage worms |
Step 6: Planting — Seeds vs. Transplants
New gardeners face an early choice with most crops: start from seed or buy transplants from a nursery. Both have advantages.
Starting from Seed
Advantages:
- Dramatically lower cost — $3–$5 for a packet of seeds vs. $3–$6 per transplant
- Far wider variety selection — nurseries stock a limited range; seed catalogs offer hundreds of varieties
- Satisfying to grow from the very beginning
Best crops to direct sow (plant seeds directly in the garden):
- Beans, peas, carrots, beets, radishes, lettuce, spinach, chard, kale, squash, cucumbers, corn
Best crops to start indoors (6–8 weeks before last frost, then transplant):
- Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, celery, leeks, onions
Buying Transplants
Advantages:
- Weeks of growing time already completed
- Eliminates the indoor seed-starting setup
- Reliable for crops that are slow or difficult from seed
For beginners, a practical approach is to buy transplants for tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant — the crops that benefit most from the head start — and direct sow everything else.
Choosing healthy transplants at the nursery:
- Short and stocky is better than tall and leggy
- Deep green leaves with no yellowing
- No visible pests on leaves or stems
- Root ball that holds together without being completely root-bound
Step 7: Watering — How Much and How Often
Inconsistent watering is the leading cause of vegetable garden problems. Too little causes wilting, blossom drop, and bitterness in leafy crops. Too much causes root rot, fungal disease, and nutrient leaching.
The General Rule
Most vegetable gardens need 1–1.5 inches of water per week, delivered consistently. In hot, dry weather this may increase to 2 inches. Rainfall counts toward this total.
How to Water Correctly
Water at the base of plants, not overhead. Overhead watering wets foliage, which promotes fungal disease. Water directed at soil-level goes where roots are and keeps leaves dry.
Water deeply and less frequently rather than shallowly and often. Deep watering encourages roots to grow deeper, producing more drought-tolerant plants. Shallow, frequent watering keeps roots near the surface where they are vulnerable to heat and drought.
Water in the morning. Morning watering gives any water that does splash onto foliage time to dry during the day. Evening watering leaves foliage wet overnight, creating ideal conditions for fungal diseases.
Check soil moisture before watering. Push your finger 2 inches into the soil. If it feels moist, wait. If it is dry at 2 inches, water. This simple test prevents both overwatering and underwatering.
Watering Tools
| Method | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Drip irrigation / soaker hose | Any garden; especially large beds | Most efficient; delivers water directly to roots |
| Watering can | Small containers and seedlings | Good for gentle watering without disturbing soil |
| Garden hose with adjustable nozzle | All garden types | Versatile; use a gentle shower setting |
| Overhead sprinkler | Large in-ground beds | Least ideal; wets foliage; use only in morning |
For a comprehensive look at water efficiency strategies, our water conservation tips for backyard gardeners covers irrigation methods, mulching for moisture retention, and scheduling strategies that reduce your water use while keeping plants thriving.
Step 8: Feeding Your Vegetables
Vegetables are heavy feeders — they grow fast and remove nutrients from the soil quickly. A soil rich in organic matter and compost provides a good foundation, but most vegetable gardens benefit from supplemental feeding throughout the season.
Types of Fertilizer
Organic slow-release fertilizers (compost, aged manure, balanced granular organic fertilizers) feed plants gradually over weeks and months. Apply at planting time and once or twice during the season. These are the best choice for building long-term soil health.
Liquid fertilizers (fish emulsion, seaweed extracts, compost tea) are absorbed quickly by roots and foliage and can address deficiencies fast. Apply every 2–4 weeks during active growing season.
Feeding Schedule by Crop Type
| Crop Type | Feeding Priority | Recommended Fertilizer |
|---|---|---|
| Tomatoes, peppers | High — heavy feeders | Balanced fertilizer at planting; switch to low-nitrogen, high-phosphorus at flowering |
| Leafy greens | Medium — nitrogen-responsive | Nitrogen-rich fertilizer every 3–4 weeks |
| Beans, peas | Low — fix their own nitrogen | Minimal fertilizer; high nitrogen reduces pod production |
| Root vegetables | Medium | Low-nitrogen, high-phosphorus; excess nitrogen produces tops, not roots |
| Herbs | Low | Light feeding; too much nitrogen reduces flavor intensity |
Step 9: Managing Weeds and Pests
No vegetable garden is entirely free of weeds and pests. The goal is management — keeping both at levels where they do not significantly reduce your harvest — rather than elimination.
Weed Management
Mulch is your best weapon. A 2–3 inch layer of straw, wood chips, shredded leaves, or grass clippings applied around plants suppresses weed germination by blocking light, retains soil moisture, regulates temperature, and breaks down to add organic matter. It is one of the highest-return-per-effort practices in vegetable gardening.
Weed early and often. Small weeds pulled before they flower and set seed are far easier to manage than established weeds. A five-minute walk through the garden with a hand weeder every few days prevents the accumulation of a back-breaking weeding session later.
Never let weeds go to seed. A single mature weed can scatter hundreds or thousands of seeds. Removing weeds before seed set dramatically reduces next season’s weed pressure.
Common Vegetable Garden Pests and Natural Solutions
| Pest | Signs | Natural Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Aphids | Clusters on new growth; sticky honeydew | Insecticidal soap spray; attract ladybugs with flowering plants |
| Caterpillars / hornworms | Large irregular holes; stripped leaves | Hand pick; Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis) spray for heavy infestations |
| Slugs and snails | Ragged holes; slime trails; nocturnal | Beer traps; diatomaceous earth; copper barriers |
| Whiteflies | White cloud when plant is disturbed | Yellow sticky traps; insecticidal soap |
| Cutworms | Seedlings cut at soil level overnight | Collar around stem base; diatomaceous earth |
For a complete natural pest management guide including companion planting strategies and homemade spray recipes, our garden pest control naturally guide covers every common vegetable garden pest and how to manage it without chemical pesticides.
Step 10: Harvesting — The Most Important Skill Nobody Talks About
New gardeners are often uncertain about when and how to harvest, and the result is either harvesting too early (before peak flavor) or too late (overripe vegetables that reduce the plant’s productivity).
The Harvest Principle
Harvest regularly and consistently. Most vegetable plants are programmed to produce seeds before they die. When you harvest regularly — keeping the plant from setting mature seeds — you extend its productive life and increase total yield. A zucchini left on the plant until it is baseball-bat sized signals the plant to stop producing. Zucchini harvested at 6–8 inches keeps the plant producing prolifically for months.
Harvest Indicators by Vegetable
| Vegetable | Harvest When… | Common Mistake |
|---|---|---|
| Tomatoes | Fully colored and slightly soft to the touch | Harvesting while still firm and orange |
| Zucchini | 6–8 inches long | Letting it grow to marrow size |
| Beans | Pods are filled but before seeds bulge visibly | Leaving pods until they are tough and stringy |
| Lettuce | Outer leaves at 4–6 inches; before bolting | Waiting until it bolts and turns bitter |
| Cucumbers | Firm, full-sized but before yellowing | Leaving on vine until yellow and seedy |
| Peppers | Green: firm and full size; Colored: fully changed | Harvesting too early before flavor develops |
| Basil | Pinch stems just above a leaf pair; before flowering | Letting it flower, which triggers bitterness |
First-Season Vegetable Garden Timeline
Here is a realistic month-by-month picture of what your first growing season looks like, from early preparation through final harvest:
| Timing | Activity |
|---|---|
| 6–8 weeks before last frost | Start tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant indoors from seed (or plan to buy transplants) |
| 4–6 weeks before last frost | Plant cool-season crops outdoors: lettuce, spinach, peas, kale, radishes |
| 2 weeks before last frost | Prepare beds, amend soil, install supports and trellises |
| Last frost date | Transplant tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, squash outdoors; direct sow beans |
| 2–4 weeks after transplanting | Begin regular feeding; mulch established beds |
| 6–8 weeks after planting | First harvests: radishes, lettuce, herbs, earliest beans |
| Peak season | Consistent harvesting 2–3 times per week; water and feed regularly |
| Late season | Plant fall cool-season crops; begin composting spent plants |
| End of season | Clear beds; add compost; note what worked for next year |
Common First-Garden Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
1. Planting too much The most universal beginner mistake. Start with one 4×8 raised bed or a 10×10 in-ground plot. You can always expand next season once you understand the time commitment involved. An abandoned, overgrown garden is discouraging; a small, productive, well-tended garden is deeply satisfying.
2. Choosing the wrong location Planting in a spot that receives under 6 hours of sun because it is convenient is the second most common mistake. Visit your chosen location throughout the day before committing. Shade is a more fundamental problem than soil quality.
3. Skipping soil preparation Planting directly into native soil without amendment is setting yourself up for poor results. Even a modest addition of compost before planting makes a significant difference. Soil health is where experienced gardeners invest most of their attention.
4. Inconsistent watering Feast-or-famine watering — forgetting for a week, then overwatering to compensate — causes blossom drop in tomatoes, tip burn in lettuce, splitting in root vegetables, and general plant stress. Set a consistent watering schedule and check soil moisture rather than watering on a fixed timer.
5. Planting warm-season crops too early Tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, and squash planted before the soil has warmed and frost risk has passed simply sit there, sulk, and often die. Warm soil (65°F+) is as important as the air temperature for these crops. Wait until two weeks after your last frost date to be safe.
6. Not labeling plants Seedlings of different vegetable varieties look nearly identical when small. Label every row and every transplant at the time of planting — not later, when you are sure you will remember.
7. Giving up after one failure Every experienced gardener has lost plants to frost, drought, pest outbreaks, and disease. Failure in the first season is normal and informative. Keep notes on what happened and use them to do better next year. Gardening skill is built season by season, not in a single summer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How much space do I actually need for a productive vegetable garden? A 4×8 foot raised bed — 32 square feet — is enough space for a genuinely productive first garden that supplies a family of two to four with regular fresh vegetables throughout the growing season. With intensive planting and succession sowing, even this modest space produces surprising quantities of lettuce, herbs, tomatoes, beans, and more. You do not need a large yard or extensive space to grow meaningful amounts of food.
Q: I have a shady yard. Can I still grow vegetables? Yes, with the right crop selection. Leafy greens — lettuce, spinach, kale, chard, arugula, mustard greens — produce well with 4–6 hours of sunlight and are significantly more shade-tolerant than fruiting crops. Herbs like parsley, cilantro, and mint also tolerate partial shade. Fruiting vegetables (tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, squash) genuinely need 6–8 hours minimum and will not produce adequately in shady conditions.
Q: Should I use seeds or buy transplants for my first garden? A practical compromise works well for beginners: buy transplants for tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant (which require a long indoor growing period before transplanting outdoors), and direct sow everything else from seed. This approach minimizes the complexity of indoor seed starting while still enjoying the cost and variety benefits of seeds for most crops.
Q: How do I know when my soil is ready to plant? Two simple tests: the squeeze test (take a handful of soil and squeeze — it should form a loose ball that crumbles easily when pressed, not a tight sticky mass and not dust) and the soil temperature test (a soil thermometer inserted 2 inches deep should read at least 60°F for most cool-season crops and 65°F+ for warm-season crops). Do not plant until both conditions are met.
Q: What is the single most important thing I can do to succeed in my first garden? Choose a location that receives at least 6 hours of direct sunlight per day. More vegetable gardens fail from insufficient sun than from any other single cause. Even average soil, inconsistent watering, and minimal pest management will produce a reasonable harvest if the sunlight requirement is met. A perfect soil in a shady spot will disappoint every time.
Conclusion
Starting a vegetable garden from scratch does not require expertise, a large yard, or a significant investment. It requires a sunny spot, reasonably prepared soil, a thoughtful selection of easy crops, and the consistency to water and tend your plants through the season.
Your first garden will not be perfect. You will lose some plants to late frost, overwatering, or pests. You will plant some things that underperform and others that surprise you with their productivity. All of that is part of the learning process — and the learning is genuinely enjoyable.
What your first garden will give you, even imperfectly, is the experience of growing something from seed to table. That experience, once you have had it, tends to expand into a second season, a larger bed, a wider variety selection, and a gardening practice that grows alongside your skills and confidence.
Start small, start simple, and start this season. The best time to plant your first vegetable garden was last year. The second best time is now.