Sage has long been used to sooth scratchy and irritated
throats. |
Natural Pain Relief is as Close as
Your Garden
By Melinda Myers
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[July 10, 2018]
Busy
schedules, over indulging, and strenuous summer activities can lead
to sore muscles, indigestion and headaches.
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When searching for pain relief, look no further
than your own garden or your local farmer’s market. These five foods
fresh from the garden – or pot – are packed with super
pain-relieving and anti-inflammatory power.
Mint
Infuse mint into your tea or ice water to refresh and rejuvenate, so
you’re ready for more summer fun. Mint also helps relieve headaches
and general aches and pain. Grow this vigorous perennial herb in a
container so it won’t overtake your other plants. Then at the end of
the season, root a few cuttings to start new plants to grow indoors.
All you need is a sunny window, quality potting mix and regular
watering.
Hot Peppers
Capsaicin, the spicy element in chili, jalapeno, habanero and
cayenne peppers, is a great pain-fighting tool and is often used in
topical creams to help treat backaches, arthritis and muscle pain.
Hot peppers are ready to harvest when they are fully colored. Ask
friends to share their harvest or purchase hot peppers at your local
farmer’s market if your garden is lacking this plant. Be sure to
purchase extra hot peppers to dry and enjoy year-round. Then add
these tasty and pain-relieving plants to your garden next summer.
Plant them after the soil and air warm, at the same time you plant
sweet peppers and tomatoes.
Cherries
Manage muscle pain and inflammation with sour cherries. They are
loaded with disease fighting chemicals and antioxidants. Plus, they
help fight inflammation and relieve pain. Purchase plenty of
cherries to juice, dry and preserve so you can enjoy their health
benefits all year long. And consider planting a sour cherry tree in
your backyard. Montmorency is the most popular sour cherry tree,
needing only 700 hours of air temperatures between 34 and 45 degrees
to initiate flowering for fruit development. New hardier dwarf
introductions from the University of Saskatchewan can be grown in
colder regions including zone 2.
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Although it takes several years for cherry plants to
start producing fruit, you’ll enjoy watching your tree grow into
maturity and bear its first crop. Just make sure to cover the plants
with netting so the birds don’t eat your harvest.
Ginger
Grow ginger in a pot outdoors or sunny window along side your other
indoor plants. Ginger helps reduce inflammation and combat
migraines, muscle pain, arthritis and post workout or post-gardening
soreness. All this and it helps fight nausea so common during a
summer filled with barbeques and celebrations. Although it’s a
tropical plant, you can find plants or rhizomes (the part you eat)
online. Or join other enthusiastic gardeners who have had success
rooting the rhizomes they have purchased at the grocery store to
start new plants.
Sage
Harvest a few sage leaves, add hot water and brew a bit of sore
throat relief. Sage tea has long been used to sooth scratchy and
irritated throats and showed positive results in a 2006 clinical
trial. Grow this herb in the garden or container. It thrives in a
sunny spot with well-drained soil. Harvest leaves as needed
throughout the season. Regular harvesting encourages more growth for
future harvests. You can remove as much as one third of the plant at
one time for preserving.
So next time your feeling a bit of pain, look to the garden for a
bit of relief. Even the simple act of tending your garden and
harvesting produce can elevate your mood, lower your blood pressure
and start you on the road to feeling better.
[Photo credit: Melinda Myers, LLC]
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening
books, including Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses
“How to Grow Anything” DVD series and the nationally syndicated
Melinda’s Garden Moment TV & radio segments. Myers is a columnist
and contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine. Myers’s web
site is www.MelindaMyers.com. |