GardeningTips.YourWebAuthority.com

Gardening Zone Section


Welcome to GardeningTips.YourWebAuthority.com

Article

Gardening is Good Therapy
Valerie Giles

Many of us garden just for the sheer joy of it. But did you know that all over the country the healing aspects of gardening are being used as therapy or as an adjunct to therapy?

Although this might sound like a new concept, garden therapy has been around for decades. For example, the Garden Therapy Program at Central State Hospital in Milledgeville, and in regional hospitals in Atlanta, Augusta, Columbus, Rome, Thomasville and Savannah, has been helping people for over 40 years through gardening activities known as social and therapeutic horticulture.

So what exactly is social and therapeutic horticulture (or garden therapy)? 

According to the article “Your future starts here: practitioners determine the way ahead” from Growth Point (1999) volume 79, pages 4-5, horticultural therapy is the use of plants by a trained professional as a medium through which certain clinically defined goals may be met. “…Therapeutic horticulture is the process by which individuals may develop well-being using plans and horticulture. This is achieved by active or passive involvement.”

Although the physical benefits of garden therapy have not yet been fully realized through research, the overall benefits are almost overwhelming. For starters, gardening therapy programs result in increased elf-esteem and self-confidence for all participants. 

Social and therapeutic horticulture also develops social and work skills, literacy and numeric skills, an increased sense of general well-being and the opportunity for social interaction and the development of independence. In some instances it can also lead to employment or further training or education. Obviously different groups will achieve different results.

Groups recovering from major illness or injury, those with physical disabilities, learning disabilities and mental health problems, older people, offenders and those who misuse drugs or alcohol, can all benefit from the therapeutic aspects of gardening as presented through specific therapy related programs. In most cases, those that experience the biggest impact are vulnerable or socially excluded individuals or groups, including the ill, the elderly, and those kept in secure locations, such as hospitals or prisons.

One important benefit to using social and therapeutic horticulture is that traditional forms of communication aren’t always required. This is particularly important for stroke patients, car accident victims, those with cerebral palsy, aphasia or other illnesses or accidents that hinder verbal communication. Gardening activities lend themselves easily to communicative disabled individuals. This in turn builds teamwork, self-esteem and self-confidence, while encouraging social interaction. 

Another group that clearly benefits from social and therapeutic horticulture are those that misuse alcohol or substances and those in prison. Teaching horticulture not only becomes a life skill for these individuals, but also develops a wide range of additional benefits.

Social and therapeutic horticultures gives these individuals a chance to participate in a meaningful activity, which produces food, in addition to creating skills relating to responsibility, social skills and work ethic. 

The same is true for juvenile offenders. Gardening therapy, as vocational horticulture curriculum, can be a tool to improve social bonding in addition to developing improved attitudes about personal success and a new awareness of personal job preparedness.

The mental benefits don’t end there. Increased abilities in decision-making and self-control are common themes reported by staff in secure psychiatric hospitals. Reports of increased confidence, self-esteem and hope are also common in this environment.

Prison staff have also noticed that gardening therapy improves the social interaction of the inmates, in addition to improving mutual understanding between project staff and prisoners who shared outdoor conditions of work. 

It’s interesting that studies in both hospitals and prisons consistently list improving relationships between participants, integrating with the community, life skills and ownership as being some of the real benefits to participants.

But in addition to creating a myriad of emotional and social benefits, the health benefits of being outdoors, breathing in fresh air and doing physical work cannot be overlooked. In most studies, participants noted that fresh air, fitness and weight control where prime benefits that couldn’t be overlooked. 

Although unable to pin down a solid reason, studies have shown that human being posses an innate attraction to nature. What we do know, is that being outdoors creates feelings of appreciation, tranquility, spirituality and peace. So it would seem, that just being in a garden setting is in itself restorative. Active gardening only heightens those feelings. 

With so many positive benefits to gardening, isn’t it time you got outside and started tending to your garden? Next time you are kneeling in fresh dirt to pull weeds or plant a new variety of a vegetable or flower, think about the tranquility you feel while being outdoors in your garden. Let the act of gardening sooth and revitalize you. Soak up the positive benefits of tending to your own garden.

If you have someone in your life that could benefit from garden therapy, contact your local health unit to find out more about programs in your area. Not only will the enjoyment of gardening help bond you together, but it will also create numerous positive mental and physical benefits for both of you.

So get gardening today for both your physical and mental health. You’ll enjoy the experience so much that you’ll immediately thank yourself. Valerie Giles operates the Grow Your Own Garden Website which focuses on gardening products, flower and vegetable seeds, atio furniture and garden accessories. Everything ou need for the gardening season.http://www.grow-your-own-garden.com



Gardening Zone Best products


Gardening Zone News

gardening zone

Among horticulturists, few topics are more contentious than plant-hardiness zones. Click to enlarge ARCHIVE PHOTO Allamanda is a plant that thrives in this area, although at least one respected plant guide says it is too cold-sensitive for our ...

Read more


Are planting zones pure poppycock? - Herald Tribune

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - A new gardener recently asked me about plant hardiness zones. I assumed everyone knew about this subject, much like I assumed my son knew how to do laundry when he left for college. Wrong on both counts. For gardeners, the Kanawha ...

Read more


Zone map generally helpful, but ... - Charleston Gazette

I didn't find the redeeming value in my graduate taxonomy course at the time, but now I am fascinated with plant families. So I've decided to go where no garden writer I know of has gone before and give a "Family of the Year" award for 2008. Time ...

Read more


Acanthus: 2008 plant family of the year - Houston Chronicle

IN Britain, the argument for and against cannabis legalisation continues to rage inconclusively, libertarians pitched against traditionalists. In Canada, however, the debate is being taken one dramatic step further. Precise details of the project are ...

Read more


A trip to a funny farm - Daily Telegraph

Very fitting, I think, as we now look at the bare trees, shriveled grass and dead flower stalks and yet, easily remember the fullness and colors of the past three seasons. And all gardeners know that January is the start of the new gardening season ...

Read more


January a good time to plan your garden - Iowa City Press-Citizen

Check out a new publication by extension specialist Scot Nelson and extension agent Kelvin Sewake titled, "Volcanic Emissions Injury to Plant Foliage." It can be downloaded from the Web site at http://www.ctahr.hawaii.edu . Pull down "home ...

Read more


Publication takes closer looks at vog's effects on plants - Hawaii Tribune-Herald

They say people don't like change. We're not so sure about that. In a weeklong series, we're offering stories about different aspects of change. Not spending money buys you a lot of free advice. That's the main thing I've learned during the first six ...

Read more


Quitting Shopping Has Its Own Price - Hartford Courant

During a recent holiday visit to my mother, I ventured out on a chilly, misty afternoon to experience the Longwood Gardens holiday display, about half an hour away in Pennsylvania. I had been many times as a child, but I found this year's holiday ...

Read more


Longwood Gardens went all out for the holidays - West Hawaii Today

Pending validation of the results, Dutchman Gérard De Rooy (Ginaf) won the second special stage, picking up his 11th stage victory on the Dakar as a result and his first in 2009, 2 minutes in front of Russian Firdaus Kabirov (Kamaz) and 8.38 ahead ...

Read more


Stage 2 Santa Rosa to Puerto Madryn notes - Motorsport.com

If Santa delivered new electronics under your Christmas tree this year, you may be wondering what to do with your old cell phone, computer or camera. Most people get rid of their electronics the same way as their used Christmas trees, batteries and ...

Read more