Green Is Good

The surprising health benefits of gardening

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The surprising health benefits of gardening

Gardening offers a lot more than fresh vegetables and flowers. Working in a nice outdoor space can boost your immune system, help you stay fit and sharpen your brain—and that’s just for starters. There are plenty more advantages for mind, body and soul.

It’s a fun workout

Do you find the idea of puttering around in a garden a bit dull? If so, knowing the good it’s doing you physically might make it more entertaining. Planting seeds, pulling up weeds, carrying bags of mulch, moving pots, pushing a lawnmower and other gardening tasks actually provide a whole-body, moderate-intensity workout for adults over 65 years old, suggests a 2014 paper from the American Society for Horticultural Science. Even better, it’s activity with a purpose—one that might keep you in motion longer than traditional exercise.

It sharpens your mind

More than just good exercise for your body, gardening also provides a workout for your brain, according to a 2019 study that appeared in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. Researchers measured brain nerve growth factors related to memory in study participants—all seniors—before and after they created a vegetable garden, and found that their levels of brain nerve growth had increased significantly.

It reduces your risk of heart disease

Even though gardening may not involve high-intensity cardio, it still provides heart health benefits. In fact, gardening can contribute to cutting the risk of a heart attack or stroke and prolong life by 30 per cent, according to a Swedish study published in 2013 in the British Journal of Sports Medicine. The benefits come from the combination of physical exercise and the stress reduction that ‘playing in the dirt’ provides.

It helps you control weight

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