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Home Vegetable Gardening
Home Vegetable Gardening
by F. F. Rockwell
Our Price: $7.99
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All New Square Foot Gardening
All New Square Foot Gardening
by Mel Bartholomew
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Gardening Basics For Dummies®, Mini Edition
Gardening Basics For Dummies®, Mini Edition
by Steven A. Frowine
The Vegetable Gardener's Bible, 2nd Edition
The Vegetable Gardener's Bible, 2nd Edition
by Edward C. Smith
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You Grow Girl: The Groundbreaking Guide to Gardening
You Grow Girl: The Groundbreaking Guide to Gardening
by Gayla Trail
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Successful Container Gardening
Successful Container Gardening
by Douglas Green
Vegetable Gardening in the North
Vegetable Gardening in the North
by Douglas Green

 

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Using Gardening to Get in Shape

from:
By Deb St. George, on Gardening Health in your Gardening Guide From Spiritravels.com





While gardening is usually thought of as a productive way to grow beautiful plants and obtain tasty fruits and vegetables, few gardeners have ever considered the immense amounts of exercise one can get in the process of gardening. While you can get almost as much muscle (if not more) exercise as you do working out, it is very productive at the same time.

You may wonder how gardening could possibly give as much exercise as working out. Just think about all the various facets of preparing a garden. There are holes to be dug, bags and pots to be carried, and weeds to be pulled. Doing all of these things help to work out almost every group of muscles in your body.

My brother is a fanatic about working out. Almost every time I call his house, I end up interrupting some muscle toning activity. I’ve never really enjoyed working out, though, as it seems that the constant lifting of heavy things just puts a strain on my body with no immediate positive results. But while he is into working out, I am almost equally enthusiastic about gardening. I work outside improving my garden almost every day. I think I definitely surprised my brother when he realized that I am almost as muscular as he is; but I have never lifted a single dumbbell!

Before you go out into your garden, you should always stretch out. Even if your goal isn’t to work out and get exercise, it’s still a good idea. Often gardeners spend long periods of time hunched over or bent over. This can be bad for your back. So not only should you stretch out before hand, but you should always take frequent breaks if you’re spending long amounts of time in these positions.

Weeding and pruning are some of the best workouts a gardener can get. With the constant crouching and standing, the legs get a great workout. If your weeds are particularly resistant, your arms will become particularly toned just from the effort required to remove them from the ground. If you plan on taking the whole workout think very seriously, you should always be switching arms and positions to spread out the work between different areas of your body.

One of the most obvious ways to get exercise is in the transporting and lifting of bags and pots. Between the nursery and your house, you will have to move the bags multiple times (to the checkout, to your car, to your garden, and then spreading them out accordingly). As long as you remember to lift with your legs and not your back, transporting bags and pots can give you a fairly big workout, even though you probably don’t make those purchases very often.

Mowing your grass can also be a great exercise. If you’ve got an older mower that isn’t self propelled, just the act of pushing it through the grass will give you more of a workout than going to the gym for a few hours. During the course of mowing the grass, you use your chest, arms, back, and shoulder to keep the mower ahead of you. Your thighs and butt also get worked a lot to propel the mower. Not only do you get an all around muscle work out, but it can improve your heart’s health. It’s good for you as a cardiovascular activity, as well as a great way to lose weight due to the increased heart rate and heavy breathing.

If you plan on using gardening as a way to get in shape or lose some weight, you can hardly go wrong. Just be sure to stretch out, drink plenty of water, and apply sunscreen. As long as you take steps to prevent the few negative effects such as pulled muscles, dehydration and sunburn, I think you’ll have a great time and end up being a healthier person because of it.


 

Free Gardening Books News

Gardening before the Internet

Growers learned about plant varieties and gardening tips primarily from books before the age of websites and YouTube. Author and landscape designer C. Colston Burrell will explore how some seminal garden and nature books changed the way we design, plant and maintain our landscapes.

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New Northwest garden books run from yard art to organic flowers

Gardening is nothing if not local, says Plant Life columnist Valerie Easton, so you can be sure that the featured plants, techniques and materials suit our climate.

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Home and Garden: My backyard pages

Gardening books can plant a seed with eco-friendly green thumbs... Gardeners can never have enough plants in their yard, seed catalogs on their nightstand or garden books in their library.

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Things to do in Boring, Clackamas, Estacada, Happy Valley and Molalla

My list today includes a carnival, a volunteer recognition ceremony, plays, story times, and a gardening workshop.

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Big book sale starts today at Yanity Gym

Many thousands of books at bargain prices will be available at the Friends of the Ridgefield Library’s Spring Book sale Friday through Monday, May 18 through 21 at Yanity Gym, 60 Prospect Street. Volunteers have sorted more than 40,000 items into many categories including current adult fiction and non-fiction, art, biography, entertainment, nutrition, history, gardening, travel, mystery ...

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New format brings funds

THE THIRD annual Michael Egan Memorial Book Fair had its hits and misses with a well-known title falling into the latter category. While shoppers could not get enough of hobby, gardening, cooking and self-help books, they steered clear of a whopping 50 copies of Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code.

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Garden expo and plant sale in Clayton

MILLVILLE — The Rutgers New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station Cooperative Extension of Gloucester County Master Gardeners will host a free Garden Expo and Plant Sale from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at the Offices of the Government Services, 1200 Delsea Drive, Clayton.

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