Garden for life : strategies for easier, greener, more joyful gardening as we age / Rhonda Fleming Hayes.
Material type:
TextPublisher: White River Junction : Chelsea Green Publishing, 2026Description: pages cmContent type: - text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781645023258
- SB439 .H39 2026
| Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adult Book | Phillipsburg Free Public Library | Adult Non-Fiction | New Books | 635 HAY | Available | pap. ed | 36748002646828 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
From award-winning writer and photographer Rhonda Fleming Hayes comes the perfect guide to help you evaluate, redesign, and right-size your garden space as you age to make gardening easier, more sustainable, and perpetually fun!
In Garden for Life , Rhonda Fleming Hayes brings a lifetime of gardening experience, research-based advice, and collective wisdom to older gardeners who are looking for inspiration and practical strategies. This delightful comprehensive guide suggests ways to downsize or redesign an existing garden, presents new techniques and tools to make gardening less strenuous, and highlights plants that "multitask" to make a garden more sustainable--for both the gardener and the environment. It also advises on how and when to ask for help to lighten the load so we can focus on the life-enhancing aspects of time in the garden.
Garden for Life reminds us of the many proven health benefits of gardening. Gardening is a simple way to answer the human need to connect with nature, a craving called biophilia . It offers a low-intensity workout with a variety of natural movement, provides a sense of purpose while nurturing a meditative state that decreases stress, fosters improved nutrition and better brain health, and grows social connection and community. In short, gardening is excellent for health and longevity!
And if that is not motivation enough, Garden for Life also features "gardener spotlights"--short profiles of inspiring gardeners and their gardens across the country. The book concludes with a call to action, highlighting the many ways that older gardeners can cultivate the next generation of joyful, ecologically friendly gardeners in their communities.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Changes and positive aging -- 2. Evaluating your garden -- 3. Deciding to simplify, downsize, or move -- 4. Garden diversions (beyond plants) -- 5. Reimagining your garden -- 6. Smart gardening methods -- 7. Smart tools of the trade -- 8. When and how to get help -- 9. Remembering, forgetting, and recordkeeping -- 10. Sit down, stand up.
"From an award-winning writer and photographer comes the perfect guide to help you evaluate your garden situation, redesign your garden, and right-size your space to make gardening easier! In a recent survey, Forbes magazine found that 77 percent of adults over 50 prefer to age in place-as a way to preserve independence, familiarity, community, and quality of life. Many of them don't want to leave gardens that in some cases they've spent a lifetime nurturing but now find daunting to maintain. As people approaching retirement age experience physical changes, they are also encountering financial and family changes, and differing priorities that can affect the amount of time and energy they allot to gardening. Garden for Life will help older gardeners evaluate their garden situation, suggesting ways to redesign an existing garden or to design a new one when downsizing (or "right-sizing"), new techniques and tools to make gardening easier, how to select appropriate plants, and also how and when to ask for help to lighten the load-so that they can focus on the life-enhancing aspects of gardening. Hayes has long written about the how-to of gardening and is also keenly aware of the why. Gardening is a simple way to answer the human need to connect with nature; that craving, called biophilia is so powerful that doctors in many cases have started prescribing time in nature over drugs. Gardening offers a low-intensity workout with a variety of natural movements. Time spent tending plants can produce a meditative state that decreases stress while giving the gardener a sense of purpose. Growing your own food is a recipe for improved nutrition and better brain health. Gardening grows social connection and community. In short, gardening is excellent for health and longevity. Nowadays older gardeners are leading efforts on garden-related environmental action, food access, habitat creation, and community involvement. Many see gardening as their legacy. The book will feature five to seven short profiles of inspiring older gardeners and their gardens. In addition, there will be a section featuring some of the simple "garden-adjacent" exercises shared by the author's trainer (a certified senior fitness expert and Master Gardener) that mimic movements in the garden, helpful for warming up before gardening and for downtime in winter. The book will conclude with an appeal to honor and celebrate older gardeners and their collective wisdom, along with a call to action, highlighting the many ways that older gardeners can grow new gardeners"-- Provided by publisher.