If you love gardening but arthritis is getting in your way take heart: there are ways around this debilitating medical condition that can help get you out in the garden again before you know it. Here are eight top tips for gardening with arthritis.
October 5, 2015
If you love gardening but arthritis is getting in your way take heart: there are ways around this debilitating medical condition that can help get you out in the garden again before you know it. Here are eight top tips for gardening with arthritis.
Make the handles on lawn and garden tools easier to grasp the way hockey players wearing mitts do: wrap the handle in athletic tape to make it thicker – and wear gloves when working.
Take a break every 15 minutes when gardening.
A garden doesn't have to be at ground level. Instead of stooping to the dirt, use raised beds so you can exercise your green thumb from a seated or standing position.
Kneeling can be hard on knees. A better position is sitting low to the ground on a bucket, stool or small wagon.
As an alternative position, try lying on your side for hand digging or weeding.
If you need to kneel and your joints comfortably allow it, use pads made of closed-cell foam, which cushions without compressing flat.
When raking, use short strokes.
Get with the narrowest trowel you can find.
When planting seeds, sharpen one end of a broomstick to make holes in the soil, then drop seeds from a standing position using a long piece of small-diameter PVC piping cut to about waist height.
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