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    Gardening With Arthritis: Tips to preventing joint pain

    By News Staff,

    17 days ago
    Gardening With Arthritis: Tips to preventing joint pain News Staff Wed, 05/01/2024 - 06:35 Image Body

    With a few adaptations, you can reap the benefits of gardening with less arthritis joint pain.

    Gardening can be a healthy hobby, especially when living with arthritis – providing both physical and mental health benefits. All you need is a little planning and creativity to reduce the risk of joint pain and injury.

    A few shortcuts and adaptations can make gardening possible for anyone, says Heidi Sibert, a landscape architect at James Martin Associates in Chicago. Sibert, who has psoriatic arthritis, is a passionate proponent of a horticultural approach called enabling gardens.

    Enabling gardens, which are used by many doctors as a form of physical, mental and social therapy, are specifically designed to be accessible to people with specific needs and limitations. They key for people with arthritis is to keep your garden within easy reach.

    With just a few adjustments, you can do it on any scale and indulge your preference for flowers, vegetables or landscaping plants. Start by identifying any potential limitations and finding a way around each one. Here are a few ideas.

    Take Your Garden to a Higher Level If you find it difficult to bend or stoop to work in your garden, bring the garden closer to you! Try a flower box or raised flowerbed to eliminate stooping. Raised beds, containers or planting tables can reduce the stress on your knees when you’re digging and weeding.

    Raised beds can be made permanent, held up by wood, brick or stone walls that will stay in place long-term. Consider hiring someone to help with the initial installation; once in place, the garden is yours to plant and enjoy.

    For a more temporary or portable solution, you can grow your garden in pots or other containers. Container gardens are especially great for apartments and small yards. For plants that you plan to move, save your joints by using lightweight Styrofoam or plastic pots. If they’re big, fill them 1/3 full with Styrofoam peanuts, which will help with drainage and reduce their weight.

    Use Joint-Friendly Tools

    Long-handled tools that allow you to stand, not stoop, and easyto- grip hand tools are gardeners’ friends. You can add attachments that lengthen tool handles to gain leverage.

    Buy a kneeling pad or even a scooter wagon you can sit on while weeding. This will prevent you from having to stoop or bend but be sure to stand up and stretch out from time to time. With other joint-friendly tools, you can enjoy gardening with less pain.

    Practice Correct Posture

    Let your larger/ stronger joints do the work when possible. Instead of using your fingers to lift an object, try using the flat palm of your hand, your forearms or even your elbows. Keep items close to your body as you carry them. Stand or sit up straight while you work and change positions often.

    Take Frequent Breaks

    When you’re gardening, arthritis pain can build if you don’t rest your joints properly. Stop and smell the roses and have a glass of lemonade. Well-earned, frequent breaks allow you to appreciate your garden’s beauty, plan your next tasks and get more done before fatigue begins. Doing sell will help reap the mental health benefits of gardening.

    Check out the gardening tools that have earned the Arthritis Foundation’s Ease of Use certification.

    About the Arthritis Foundation For over seven decades, the Arthritis Foundation has led the fight to conquer arthritis for nearly 60 million adults and hundreds of thousands of children in the United States living with the disease.

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