Pain
Relief Found in The Garden
By Melinda Myers
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[March 24, 2023]
Look to the garden, farmer’s market, or refrigerator
next time you are battling sore muscles, indigestion, and headaches.
These five foods fresh from the garden contain powerful
pain-relieving and anti-inflammatory properties.
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Mint
Infuse mint into your tea or ice water to refresh and rejuvenate. It
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. And at the end of the season, root a few cuttings to
start new plants to grow indoors. All you need are 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.
Plant hot peppers after the soil and air warm, at the same time you
are planting sweet peppers and tomatoes. They are ready to harvest
when they are fully colored. Purchase extra hot peppers to dry and
enjoy year-round.
Cherries
Manage muscle pain and inflammation with sour cherries. They are
loaded with disease-fighting chemicals and antioxidants and 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 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. 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.
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Ginger
Ginger helps reduce inflammation and combat migraines, muscle pain,
arthritis, and post-workout or post-gardening soreness. All this
plus it helps fight nausea. 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 purchased at the grocery store to start new plants. Grow your
ginger in a pot outdoors or sunny window alongside your other indoor
plants.
Sage
Sage tea has long been used to soothe scratchy and irritated throats
and showed positive results in a 2006 clinical trial. Harvest a few
sage leaves, add hot water, and brew a bit of sore throat relief.
Grow this herb in the garden or a 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 preservation.
So next time you’re feeling a bit of pain, pass by the medicine
cabinet and 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.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including
the recently released Midwest Gardener’s Handbook, 2nd Edition and
Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow
Anything” instant video and DVD series and the nationally syndicated
Melinda’s Garden Moment TV & radio program. Myers is a columnist and
contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and her website is
www.MelindaMyers.com.
[photo courtesy of MelindaMyers.com] |