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Created on: 03/21/08 - Email to friend - Print Page

Raise Gardening to a Higher Level

By Sharon Anne Waldrop


There are shortcuts and adaptations that make it possible for anyone to garden, says Heidi Sibert, a landscape architect at James Martin Associates, in Chicago.


Sibert, who has psoriatic arthritis, is a passionate proponent of “enabling gardening,” a horticultural approach she showcased in an Arthritis Foun­dation exhibit at the annual Chicagoland Flower & Garden Show.


The core principles are to keep your garden off the ground and within easy reach, she says. You can do it on any scale and indulge your preference for flowers, vegetables or landscaping plants.


SMALL AND SIMPLE
Container Garden
Place light­weight fiberglass or foam containers on your porch or patio for easy access. The container should be half the height that the plant is expected to grow. Then add soilless or lightweight potting mix. Try cherry tomatoes, rose bushes, herbs, annuals or perennials.


MEDIUM-SIZE AND MANAGEABLE
Vertical Garden
Stack boards on bricks or concrete blocks, then populate the shelves with potted plants. If you’re handy – or have a friend who is – try building a self-supporting frame of squares. Place a plant in each cubby, and use the outer frame as a trellis for vines. Try herbs, lettuce or peas, and add flowers for color.


LARGE AND LOVELY
Raised-Bed Garden
Assemble one of the many raised-bed kits available online, or hire a professional to install a stone or timber retaining-wall garden. If built securely, the retaining wall can serve as a safe seat from which you can tend your garden. The walls should be 16 to 24 inches high, and the bed should be narrow enough to reach across comfortably. Try perennials, as well as land­scaping plants and shrubs.

 

For more gardening tips read Easy Gardening and ABCs of Gardening.


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