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A recent study has proven that gardening activities can parallel many
of our most popular exercise routines. Pruning trees and shrubs takes
the same amount of effort as walking. Raking and gathering leaves equals
riding a bicycle at 10 mph. Digging, laying sod and stacking wood is as
strenuous as playing softball. Mowing the lawn may just be as good as
aerobics for keeping fit!
While there are a lot of variables in those examples, they illustrate how doing real work in your yard can substitute for a trip to the gym. A typical day working in my garden has me on my knees, stretching into shrubs and trees, digging, pulling weeds, hauling garbage cans filled with refuse and carrying big bags of amendments. It makes me strong in ways that are practical, if not ways governed by a gym exercise machine.

Taking care of plants also satisfies the human instinct to nurture. There is a big pay off for these efforts when a plant grows and blooms spectacularly. There is no question that we gain a far greater personal reward from a home grown plant brought up from slip or seed than one we purchased all grown up.
The Virginia Cooperative Extension Service has put together a really great collection of informative articles on the benefits of working in your garden. You'll find them online at www.ext.vt.edu. For those with disabilities or anyone in their mature years, the site's gardening and health section also features excellent write ups on how to garden more wisely. It's convenient to find such an inclusive series of illustrated articles in one place that is accessible and printer friendly.
You'll learn how to avoid problems with repetitive motion injuries in a piece discussing carpal tunnel syndrome. Another section details helpful tips for those with arthritis. And a piece titled "Protecting Your Knees and Back" will help everyone avoid common stress and strain to these sensitive weight-bearing joints.

Don't overlook the detailed files on two very important insect related issues. "Ticks" helps you avoid bites that can lead to Lyme disease. "West Nile in North America" is an extensive pdf that contains detailed information on mosquito prevention and control, as well as personal protection.
Despite all these caveats, gardening remains one of the most productive roads to good fitness with a minimal risk of injury.
Many old timers scoff at the idea of going to a gym. They believe that good old-fashioned work in the home garden or vegetable patch is a much better road to health and fitness. In their minds, physical exertion with rewards like fresh veggies, fruits and flowers makes a whole lot more sense than sweating on a treadmill. In so many ways they are right, because the psychological pay off of gardening reaches into more parts of our life than we know.
So ask yourself what sounds better: to create, nurture and harvest amidst the beauty of nature, or pay money to sweat indoors.