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Personalised for your suburb and climate

Your space.
Your climate.
Your guide.

Stop Googling advice designed for somewhere else. Guildr builds you a specific food garden plan for your suburb, your soil, and your budget — so you know exactly what to plant, what to buy, and what to do this weekend.

Guides from $29
Delivered in 24–48 hours
Australian climates only
Sample guide preview
Your Property — Ashgrove, QLD
Subtropical zone · 450m² · Bore water available · 4 existing citrus trees
Climate zoneSubtropical Queensland
Best crops right nowSilverbeet, Kale, Garlic
Planting windowApril – August (peak)
Guide typeEssential — 24 pages
12-month calendar for your climate
Bed layout for your 4 existing beds
Local nurseries and suppliers
First week plan — day by day
3
Guide tiers from $29
24h
Delivered within 24–48 hours
100%
Specific to your suburb
AU
Southern Hemisphere always
7-day
Revision guarantee

Why Guildr exists

Most gardening advice wasn't written for your backyard.

Most gardening advice is generic. It's written for a broad audience, covering every climate at once, which means it's specific to none. The planting calendar doesn't match your season. The variety recommendations don't account for your summers. The build guides price things in dollars that don't exist at Bunnings.

If you're an everyday Australian with a backyard, a courtyard, or even a few pots — and you want to grow real food without wasting time on advice that doesn't apply to your situation — you need a different kind of guide.

01

Wrong climate, wrong advice

Generic guides recommend planting times for October that only make sense in the northern hemisphere. In Queensland, October is heading into the heat of summer — the worst time to plant most vegetables.

02

Wrong variety for your zone

Buying tomato seedlings that need 90 frost-free days in a region that gets winter frosts. Or tropical varieties in temperate climates. The nursery doesn't tell you this. Guildr does.

03

Overwhelm at the starting point

You read six articles and still don't know what to do this weekend. Guildr gives you exactly that — a specific, ordered plan for your first week, your first month, and your first year.

Simple process

A guide built for your garden.
Not someone else's.

Three steps. Ten minutes of your time. A personalised plan in your inbox within 24–48 hours.

1

Tell us about your space

Fill in a short questionnaire — your suburb, your space, what you already have, your goals, and your budget. Takes about 10 minutes.

The more specific you are, the more specific your guide will be. Tell us about existing plants, shade areas, water sources — all of it matters.
2

We build your guide

Every recommendation is specific to your climate zone, your soil type, your space, and what you actually want to achieve.

Your crops are chosen for your growing windows. Your prices are current Bunnings and local supplier estimates. Your calendar is for your suburb — not a generic Australian calendar.
3

Start this weekend

Your guide arrives as a clear PDF. No fluff. A practical, specific plan you can open Saturday morning and act on by Saturday afternoon.

If anything doesn't match your actual situation, reply within 7 days and we'll revise it. No questions asked.

Choose your guide

Three tiers. All personalised.

Start with what you need. Upgrade anytime. Every guide is built from your questionnaire answers — specific to your suburb, your climate, and your goals.

Quick Start
Getting Started Guide
$29 one-time

One focus area — vegetables, herbs, fruit trees, or composting. What to plant, what to buy, what to do this weekend. The easiest way to start.

  • One focus area — your choice
  • Up to 5 crops for your climate
  • Materials list with current prices
  • Day-by-day first week plan
  • Local nursery and supplier guide
  • 8–12 pages · Delivered within 24–48 hours
Get Quick Start
Perfect if you're just getting started and want one clear thing to do.
Complete
Self-Sufficiency Roadmap
$97 one-time

Everything in the Essential guide plus a full 3-year roadmap, zone and sector analysis, water harvesting, complete food preservation, and seed saving.

  • Everything in Essential, at greater depth
  • Zone and sector design for your property
  • Roof catchment water harvesting calculation
  • All 7 food preservation methods with recipes
  • Seed saving system
  • Section E: 3-year roadmap + 36-month milestone table
  • 30–40 pages · Delivered in 48 hours
Get Complete Roadmap
For homesteaders and larger properties with multiple goals.

Not sure which one is right for you? Start with the Quick Start at $29 and upgrade anytime.

Every guide includes

Specific to you.
Not generic.

Every sentence in your guide references your suburb, your climate, your space, and your goals. If a recommendation could apply to any garden anywhere — we rewrite it. That's the standard we hold every guide to.

See how it's built
🌱

Climate-specific crops

Varieties that survive and thrive in your zone

📅

Your seasonal calendar

When to plant — for your suburb, not generic Australia

💰

Current Australian prices

Materials list with Bunnings and local supplier costs

📍

Local nurseries and suppliers

Where to buy near you — not just online stores

🛠️

Step-by-step build guides

Beds, compost, worm farms, water systems, and more

📋

Your first week plan

Day-by-day tasks calibrated to your available hours

🔬

Soil biology explained

Mycorrhizal fungi, soil food web — why no-dig works

🛡️

7-day revision guarantee

Not specific enough? Reply and we'll fix it

What clients say

From the people who've used it

Why didn't something like this exist before? I've been trying to figure out where to start for two years. The guide told me exactly what to do in my specific backyard in Brisbane. We've already started.

Sarah M.Ashgrove, QLD · Essential Guide

I was skeptical that a guide could really be personalised, but every single recommendation referenced my actual space. The companion planting section was written for my specific beds. Genuinely impressive.

James T.Daylesford, VIC · Complete Roadmap

I've got a balcony and thought I couldn't really grow much. The Quick Start guide showed me exactly what I can grow in containers in Perth, what to buy, and what to do first. First silverbeet already coming through.

Leanne K.Mount Lawley, WA · Quick Start Guide

Common questions

Everything you want to know

How personalised is it, really?+
Every sentence references your situation. Your suburb, your climate zone, your soil type, your available space, your water sources, what you already have growing, your budget, and your stated goals. We hold every guide to one standard: if a sentence could apply to any garden anywhere, we rewrite it. If your guide isn't specific enough, reply within 7 days and we'll fix it.
I'm a complete beginner. Is this for me?+
Yes. The Quick Start guide and the Essential guide are both designed for people starting from scratch. No experience needed. The guide tells you what to do first, in what order, with what materials — including where to buy everything locally and roughly what it will cost.
I only have a small space. Does this still work?+
Absolutely. Many of our clients have balconies, courtyards, or only a few square metres. The guide is built around what you have — not some idealised large backyard. Renters get portable, container-based recommendations. Even a small space can grow herbs, salad greens, and cherry tomatoes worth $30–$40 a week.
What if I'm not in Queensland?+
Guildr works for all Australian climate zones — subtropical, temperate, Mediterranean (WA), cool temperate (Tasmania and alpine Victoria), tropical (far north QLD and NT), and arid. Every guide is calibrated to the client's actual suburb and climate zone.
How long does it take to receive my guide?+
Quick Start and Essential guides are delivered within 24–48 hours of receiving your completed questionnaire. The Complete Self-Sufficiency Roadmap is delivered within 48 hours. You'll receive an email with your PDF guide attached.
What's the Monthly Advisor?+
On the 1st of every month, Monthly Advisor subscribers receive a personalised email telling them exactly what to focus on in their garden that month — specific to their climate zone, their space, and their goals. Plus one question answered per month, quarterly resource packs, and community access. $15/month or $150 for the year.
What if my guide isn't specific enough?+
Reply to your delivery email within 7 days and we'll revise any section that feels too generic for your specific situation. No questions asked. This is our guarantee. The entire value of a Guildr guide is specificity — if we haven't delivered that, we'll fix it.
Which guide is right for me?+
Quick Start ($29) — if you want to focus on one area and get started this weekend. Essential ($59) — if you want a complete Year 1 plan for your whole space, including a 12-month calendar and build guides. Complete ($97) — if you have larger goals, a bigger property, multiple elements (animals, water harvesting, food forest), or want a 3-year roadmap. Not sure? Start with the Quick Start and upgrade anytime.

Ready to start?

Stop Googling.
Start growing.

Your personalised food garden guide is built from your suburb, your space, your climate, and your goals. It tells you exactly what to do. All that's left is to do it.

Delivered within 24–48 hours · 7-day revision guarantee · Australian climates only

What to Grow in Your Australian Garden Right Now

One of the most common questions from Australian gardeners — beginners and experienced alike — is simple: what should I actually be growing right now?

It sounds like it should have a straightforward answer. But the problem is that Australia spans six completely different climate zones, and what you should plant in Brisbane this month is completely different from what works in Melbourne, Perth, or Hobart.

This guide gives you a clear, zone-by-zone answer to what to grow in your Australian garden right now — so you stop Googling generic advice that doesn’t apply to your situation and start planting things that will actually grow.


Why “What to Grow” Depends Entirely on Where You Live

Most gardening content available online is written for the northern hemisphere — the UK, the US, or Europe. Their seasons are the opposite of ours. Their planting calendars are wrong for Australia. Their variety recommendations often don’t account for our heat, our humidity, or our frosts.

Even Australian gardening content is often written for a generic “Australian climate” that doesn’t exist. Australia is a continent with enormous climate variation. A subtropical gardener in Brisbane is growing in conditions that have almost nothing in common with a cool temperate gardener in Hobart — yet both are Australian.

The only way to know what to grow in your garden right now is to start with your actual climate zone.


Find Your Climate Zone First

Before anything else, identify which of these zones you’re in:

Subtropical — Brisbane, Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast, northern NSW, Cairns Temperate — Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Canberra, ACT Mediterranean — Perth, southwest WA, parts of SA Cool Temperate — Tasmania, alpine Victoria, ACT highlands Tropical — Darwin, far north QLD, Kimberley WA Arid — inland Australia, outback QLD, NT, WA, SA

Once you know your zone, scroll to your section below.


What to Grow in Subtropical Australia Right Now

Zone: Brisbane, Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast, northern NSW, Cairns

Subtropical Australia has a long warm growing season with mild winters that are ideal for vegetables. The key is avoiding the peak of summer heat for most crops — late autumn through to early spring is your prime growing window.

Best vegetables to grow now:

  • Silverbeet and rainbow chard — grows year round in subtropical zones, incredibly productive
  • Kale — thrives in the cooler months, frost tolerant
  • Asian greens — bok choy, pak choy, and choy sum grow fast and love subtropical winters
  • Beans — both climbing and bush varieties do well in the warmer months
  • Capsicum and chilli — love the subtropical heat, long productive season
  • Sweet potato — a subtropical staple, grows prolifically with minimal attention
  • Cherry tomatoes — more heat tolerant than large varieties, productive over a long season

Best herbs to grow now:

  • Basil — loves the warmth, grow through summer
  • Lemongrass — thrives in subtropical conditions year round
  • Chives and spring onions — easy, productive, and useful in the kitchen
  • Ginger and turmeric — subtropical staples, plant rhizomes in spring

What to avoid right now: Cauliflower, broccoli, and European-style brassicas struggle in subtropical heat. Stick to heat-tolerant varieties and wait for the cooler months for anything delicate.


What to Grow in Temperate Australia Right Now

Zone: Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Canberra

Temperate Australia has four distinct seasons with genuine winters that allow you to grow a wide range of cool-season crops. Spring and autumn are your most productive planting windows.

Best vegetables to grow now:

  • Broad beans — a temperate classic, plant in autumn for a spring harvest
  • Peas — snow peas and sugar snaps love cool temperate conditions
  • Brassicas — broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, and Brussels sprouts all thrive in temperate winters
  • Garlic — plant cloves in autumn for a summer harvest, one of the highest-value crops you can grow
  • Lettuce and salad greens — grow well through the cooler months with some protection from frost
  • Spinach — cold tolerant and productive through winter
  • Leeks and onions — slow growing but reliable and high value

Best herbs to grow now:

  • Parsley — thrives in cool conditions, grows year round in temperate zones
  • Coriander — bolts in heat, grows beautifully in cool weather
  • Thyme and rosemary — Mediterranean herbs that love temperate Australian conditions

What to avoid right now: Basil, sweet potato, and other tropical or subtropical crops will struggle through a temperate winter. Wait until spring when soil temperatures rise above 18 degrees.


What to Grow in Mediterranean Australia Right Now

Zone: Perth, southwest WA, parts of SA

Mediterranean Australia — particularly Perth — has hot dry summers and mild wet winters. Winter is actually your prime growing season for most vegetables, making it the opposite of what many northern hemisphere guides suggest.

Best vegetables to grow now:

  • Tomatoes — grow through the warm season before peak summer heat arrives
  • Capsicum and eggplant — love the Mediterranean warmth
  • Zucchini and cucumbers — fast growing in the warm season
  • Lettuce and salad greens — grow through the mild winter months
  • Broccoli and cauliflower — plant in autumn for a winter harvest
  • Garlic — plant in autumn, one of the most reliable crops in Mediterranean WA

Best herbs to grow now:

  • Rosemary, thyme, and sage — Mediterranean herbs that are perfectly adapted to Perth’s climate
  • Oregano — thrives in dry warm conditions
  • Parsley — grows well through the milder months

What to avoid right now: During peak Perth summer, most leafy greens and brassicas will bolt or fail in the heat. Focus on heat-tolerant crops and use shade cloth to extend the season for anything sensitive.


What to Grow in Cool Temperate Australia Right Now

Zone: Tasmania, alpine Victoria, ACT highlands

Cool temperate Australia has the shortest growing season of any Australian zone — but it’s also capable of producing exceptional quality vegetables thanks to the cold nights and genuine seasons.

Best vegetables to grow now:

  • Potatoes — a cool temperate staple, plant in spring for a summer harvest
  • Broad beans — incredibly cold tolerant, plant in winter
  • Garlic — plant in autumn, harvest in summer
  • Brassicas — broccoli, kale, and cabbage handle the cold well
  • Root vegetables — carrots, parsnips, and beetroot thrive in cool soils
  • Peas — snow peas and climbing peas love cool temperate conditions

Best herbs to grow now:

  • Chives — extremely cold tolerant, grow year round
  • Parsley — handles frost well with some protection
  • Thyme and rosemary — cold hardy and reliable

What to avoid right now: Frost-sensitive crops like tomatoes, basil, beans, and zucchini need to wait until after your last frost date — typically October to November depending on your specific location and elevation.


What to Grow in Tropical Australia Right Now

Zone: Darwin, far north QLD, Kimberley WA

Tropical Australia operates on wet season and dry season rather than four seasons. The dry season — roughly April to October — is your prime growing window for most vegetables.

Best vegetables to grow now (dry season):

  • Asian greens — bok choy, kangkong, and water spinach thrive in tropical conditions
  • Beans — long beans and snake beans are tropical staples
  • Capsicum and chilli — love tropical heat and humidity
  • Sweet potato — one of the most productive and reliable crops in tropical Australia
  • Pumpkin — grows prolifically in tropical conditions
  • Eggplant — thrives in tropical heat

Best herbs to grow now:

  • Lemongrass — a tropical staple, grows year round
  • Thai basil — more heat tolerant than European basil
  • Ginger and turmeric — tropical rhizomes that thrive in the wet season warmth

What to avoid right now: European vegetables like broccoli, cauliflower, and most salad greens struggle in tropical heat and humidity. Stick to heat-tolerant tropical varieties.


The Problem With Generic Planting Guides

Every list in this article is still general. It applies broadly to each climate zone — but your garden within that zone has its own specific microclimate, soil type, available space, and conditions.

A north-facing courtyard in Brisbane grows differently from a south-facing backyard two streets away. An elevated property in the Adelaide Hills has different frost risk than the flat suburbs below it. A Perth garden with heavy clay soil needs different management than one with sandy loam.

Generic advice — even climate-zone-specific advice — only gets you so far. At some point, you need a plan built for your actual garden.


Get a Planting Guide Built for Your Specific Suburb

If you want to know exactly what to grow in your garden right now — not a generalised zone guide but a specific list of crops, varieties, and planting times calibrated to your suburb, your space, and your goals — that’s exactly what Guildr provides.

Every Guildr guide is built from your questionnaire answers. Your suburb. Your climate zone. Your soil. Your available space. Your budget. What you already have growing. What you want to achieve.

The result is a personalised food garden guide that tells you exactly what to plant, when to plant it, where to buy it locally, and what to do first.

From $29, delivered within 24 to 48 hours.

Get your personalised guide →

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