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Friendly Ways to Battle Garden Pests
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Building a Compost Bin
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15 Deer-Resistant Plants
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Make Your Own Hypertufa Container
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Design an Engaging Entryway
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Viburnums are Versatile Shrubs
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Perfect Edges for Your Beds and Borders
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Soil Testing is Worth the Effort
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How to Start a Vegetable Garden
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25 Robust Summer Bloomers
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Off With Their Heads: Deadheading Perennials
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All About Starting Seeds
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10 Perennials Easily Grown from Seed
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The Only Shrubs You Need to Grow
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Find the Perfect Tomato
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Video: Make a Straw-Bale Garden
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Lilacs: Time for a Fresh Look
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A gardener's checklist for early summer
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How to Grow Raspberries
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Enchanting Japanese Maples
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Garden Catalog Collector
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Backyard Makeover Game
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Cool-Season Annuals
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Variegated Plants Create Drama
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Big Flowers from Bigleaf Hydrangeas
Before You Dig, Get "Fit To Garden"
comments (2) April 15th, 2011 in blogs
Riddle: What do you get when you cross an enthusiastic vegetable-growing Master Gardener with a passionately energetic, camera-ready physical therapist?
Answer: None other than Stacy Walters, the creative force behind Fit to Garden, a program designed to help gardeners stay in the garden, not flat on their backs under a mountain of ice packs.
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| Stacy Walters combines her professional training as a registered kinesiotherapist with her passion for green living. | |
Stephanie lives just outside of Boulder, CO. Now, I don't want to gloat, but out here in Santa Barbara, "last frost date" makes about as much sense as "beginning of breathing season." I forget that most of you have recently experienced that season they call winter. For months your "gardening" has consisted of rereading the tattered pages of last summer's Fine Gardening issue for the hundredth time, ordering this year's horticultural adventures from seed catalogs, and gapping the spark plugs in your trusty Fiskar's PowerGear Bypass Pruners.
Any minute now Mother Nature's public address system will blare, "Gardeners, start your engines!" and, like my Colorado pal, you'll explode out the door, fueled by the pent up energy you've been stifling all winter. But before you do anything silly, check out the Fit to Garden website (stacywalters.com).
Stacy hits the nail on the head: "Gardening, like any other strenuous activity, requires strength training in the off-season, a dynamic warm-up, proper biomechanics, and post-activity stretching. The goal is for gardeners to reduce the risk of injury, make lawn and garden work easier and more enjoyable... and ultimately help gardeners become stronger!"
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| At least it will be a few months before you'll need Stacy's advice on shoveling snow. |
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You'll find more than body mechanics at Stacy's website, like healthy cooking tips for your harvest (and some wickedly yummy cookie recipes), ideas for living a greener lifestyle, and great gardening ideas.
Take a few minutes and cruise through Fit to Garden. You'll come away with useful ideas for making your gardening time more fun, more productive, and a doing it in a cool, green way.
posted in: cool green gardens, billy goodnick, Fit to Garden, Stacy Walters
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Enter the world of sustainable gardening with Billy Goodnick's "Cool Green Gardens" blog. Billy lives in Santa Barbara, CA, and delivers a West Coast perspective on landscape design that will translate into your own backyard. Check out CGG for great ideas on reducing your impact on the environment and creating a landscape that is an extension of your home.







Comments (2)
Posted: 10:03 pm on April 16th