How to Show First-Hand Experience in a Blog Post (Using a Simple Garden Experiment)

Many articles about creating helpful content mention the importance of showing first-hand experience.

The usual advice is:

  • Add original photos
  • Share your personal observations
  • Explain what you learned

But what does that actually look like?

To demonstrate the idea, I documented something very simple: attempting to dig a small hole in my garden.

The task itself is not important. The process of documenting it is.

Start by showing where you began

Before doing anything, I took a photograph of the area I wanted to dig.

It was not a neat patch of soil. It contained weeds, old weed suppressant material and some grass growth.

This first image creates the starting point.

Image of the ground with grass, weeds and weed suppressant material present
Initial Picture: The uncleared ground

Without it, a final photograph of a hole gives no context. The reader cannot see what changed or what challenges existed.

Show the tools you used

Before starting, I photographed the small hand fork I planned to use.

This may seem like a minor detail, but it helps answer an important question:

How did you actually do this?

The small hand tool I intended to use to dig the hole
The small hand tool I chose to dig the hole

A generic article might say:

“Use the right tools for the job.”

A first-hand article can show:

“This was the tool I chose, and this is what happened when I used it.”

Document the process, not just the result

After clearing away the weeds and other material, I photographed the area again.

The patch of ground now clear of weeds etc.
The patch of ground now clear of weeds and grass.

Now the soil was exposed and the next stage of the process was visible.

This creates a sequence:

Before → Preparation → Attempt → Result

That sequence is evidence.

Include what went wrong

The excavation itself did not go exactly as planned.

The weather had been extremely hot, and the ground was much harder than expected. The small hand fork was not really the right tool for breaking through the compacted soil.

The result was a much smaller hole than I originally intended.

The start of the dug hole. The ground is very hard and it's difficult to make progress
Thr first attempt at digging the hole in the very hard ground.

But this is actually the most valuable part of the experience.

A perfect result only shows what happened.

A problem explains what someone else should consider before trying it themselves.

Show the outcome honestly

The final photograph shows the completed hole.

It is not impressive.

The final hole. Not very big as the ground was like rock.
The final outcome. A not very impressive hole in the ground.

It is simply a very small hole in a garden.

But together, the photographs prove the process:

  • This was the original area
  • This was the tool used
  • This was the preparation
  • This was the challenge encountered
  • This was the final result

The evidence tells the story.

First-hand experience is about more than saying “I tried it”

Anyone can write:

“I dug a hole and here is my advice.”

First-hand experience is stronger when you show:

  • Where you started
  • What you used
  • What happened during the process
  • What problems you encountered
  • What you learned

The most useful experiences are often not perfect successes.

The mistakes, adjustments and unexpected problems are often the parts that help other people most.

You do not need an extraordinary adventure or an expensive experiment to create experience-based content.

Sometimes a small garden project is enough.

The important thing is to document what actually happened.

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