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Gardening For Senior Citizens by John Sanderson
Are you in a wheelchair, and long to dig in the dirt and create flowering
beauty and grow far more zucchini than you can give away? Or are your knees
just starting to age and even though you've loved gardening all your life,
you're having more trouble getting up and down and are afraid you'll have to
give up gardening altogether? Did you botch the last pruning of your roses
because of the worsening arthritis in your hands?
Welcome to the world of the physically challenged gardener.
Don't despair. Adapt!
There's plenty of help out there in the form of advice, tools, raised flower
beds and other specialized equipment.
A Google search of "Disabled gardening tools" leads to 125 websites with
specific helpful adaptive equipment. "Disabled gardening" gives a whopping
873,000 results where you can find advice and "handicapped gardening" yields
111,000. Let those arthritic fingers do your walking!
Problem: "The ground is just too far down there!"
Think about doing your gardening while sitting on a chair, instead of on the
ground, squatting or bending over. The most obvious solution is to build raised
flower beds and scatter containers throughout your garden area. Buy cheap
plastic outdoor chairs and place one beside each mini-garden so you don't have
to drag or carry when it's time to weed. You can just sit down and enjoy the
feel of moist earth beneath your fingers and breathe in the heavenly smell of
freshly applied fish emulsion.
If you hang a cup holder on the edge of your container, you can even have the
luxury of tea or coffee with your weeds. Maybe the fish emulsion should wait.
Don't think about what you've lost now that you can't crawl around weeding the
perennial border; teach your grandchild or a neighborhood kid the joy to be
found doing that task ... you've just discovered a new adventure in gardening.
The good news is that you may find whole different special areas of your yard
where you can stick a mini-garden.
Get creative. Put a beautiful container near your front door and plant
wonderfully scented flowers to greet your guests ... or perhaps a nice cherry
tomato plant they can steal from on their way to ring your doorbell. Put a
waist high herb garden right outside your kitchen door and add an area in it
for your favorite cut flowers.
When you're deciding where to locate the raised bed or container, be sure to
remember physically demanding practicalities like dragging a heavy hose to
water it. Think and plan a low energy solution for what you'll do with the
compost material.
Problem: "My painful hands don't have the strength for ..."
You can get tools which extend your arms to reach the ground level flower bed
from a sitting position. Several manufacturers make specially tools with light
weight handles designed to keep the wrist and hand in a stress-free position
and to provide a firmer grip. Small, light rakes, hoes, etc. like this can work
wonders.
Think ratchet pruner, rachet lopping shears ... let the laws of physics give
your hands a hand. You'll be amazed when you look at the tools available. Pull
difficult weeds by stepping on a lever.
Problem: "I get so tired so quickly."
Hey, the weeds didn't grow all at once; you don't have to pull them all at
once. Pace yourself. Find ways to make gardening something you do while you sit
and drink a cup of tea and listen to the birds, rather than a work chore you
slave away at for a full afternoon. Pull one weed from the scented garden near
your front door on your way out and another weed on the way in. Plant parsley
in your kitchen door herb garden while your toast is toasting and the coffee is
dripping.
Buy and plant 3 packs of flowers instead of a whole flat. Take a nice aerobic
walk around your yard, stopping at a different container for 5 minutes
"conversation" with your plants on each cycle, then go back inside and plop on
the recliner. You'll be amazed at how much gets done in these mini-work
sessions. Your heart will love you, too.
Remember, one of the nice things about flowers is they don't have anything to
prove. We can all learn a lesson from them.
About the Author
This article provided courtesy of
http://www.floral-shopper.com
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