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Feed the soul: In chaotic times, gardening becomes therapy

John Raby | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years, 7 months AGO
by John Raby
| March 31, 2020 11:14 AM

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Gail Henrickson, left, and her daughter, Melissa, shop for plants at a local garden center as they stay at home during the coronavirus outbreak Monday March 23 , 2020, in Richmond, Va. The two work at a local restaurant that has closed down and are doing their spring gardening. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

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Gail Henrickson, right, and her daughter, Melissa, shop for plants at a local garden center as they stay at home during the coronavirus outbreak Monday March 23 , 2020, in Richmond, Va. The two work at a local restaurant that has closed down and are doing their spring gardening. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

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Gail Henrickson, right, and her daughter, Melissa, shop for plants at a local garden center as they stay at home during the coronavirus outbreak Monday March 23 , 2020, in Richmond, Va. The two work at a local restaurant that has closed down and are doing their spring gardening. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

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Old trousers recycled as growbags for herbs in an allotment as people are flocking to find advice on growing their own fruit and vegetables in the light of the coronavirus crisis, horticultural experts have said, in Bromley, Kent, England, Monday March 23, 2020. (Giles Anderson/PA via AP)

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Stephanie Owens looks over the garden with her son, Cole, as they tend to it at their home Wednesday March 25 , 2020, in Glen Allen, Va. Owens is a pharmacist who has had to continue to go to work, but has been able to spend more time with her kids because they are home from school . One of the activities that they have done is planting the garden. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

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Stephanie Owens and her three children Lucas, 12: Reid, 8; and Cole, 3. Tend to a small garden at their home Wednesday March 25 , 2020, in Glen Allen, Va. Owens is a pharmacist who has had to continue to go to work, but has been able to spend more time with her kids because they are home from school . One of the activities that they have done is planting the garden. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

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Stephanie Owens looks over the garden with her son, Cole, as they tend to it at their home Wednesday March 25 , 2020, in Glen Allen, Va. Owens is a pharmacist who has had to continue to go to work, but has been able to spend more time with her kids because they are home from school . One of the activities that they have done is planting the garden. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

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Stephanie Owens, right, looks over the garden with her son, Cole, left, Reid, top left, and Lucas, top center, as they tend to it at their home Wednesday March 25 , 2020, in Glen Allen, Va. Owens is a pharmacist who has had to continue to go to work, but has been able to spend more time with her kids because they are home from school . One of the activities that they have done is planting the garden. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

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In this March 23, 2020 photo, Lindsay Waldrop stands near her garden at her home in Anaheim, Calif. Waldrop plowed 1,000 square feet of grass to start a garden this year. She has planted dozens of tomatoes, eggplants and peppers with many more crops started as seeds. As the arrival of spring in the Northern Hemisphere coincides with orders to stay at home and out of crowds, the backyard garden has become a getaway for the mind in chaotic times. (Matt Snyder via AP).

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In this march 20, 2020 photo, Larry Friedman weeds his garden in Santa Cruz, Calif. Shelter in place orders to prevent the spread of coronavirus coincided with beautiful weather, and gardeners are using their newfound free time to plant and tend their flowers and vegetables. (AP Photo/Martha Mendoza)

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In this Feb. 24, 2020 photo, Heidi Schaletzky stands on the lawn near a cherry tree in her garden in Berlin, Germany. The garden is one of about 67,000 strewn across Berlin. Many were created on the edge of the city during the early 20th century to feed the capital's growing population of workers and give them an opportunity to exercise outside their often cramped apartments. They remain a treasured part of Berlin life, especially for retirees like the Schaletzkys. In order to slow down the spread of the coronavirus, the German government has considerably restricted public life and asked the citizens to stay at home and keep distance from other people. (AP Photo/Frank Jordans)

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CHANGES LAST NAME TO BOLANOS, NOT RUIZ AS SENT - In this March 28, 2020, photo, Ashton Bolanos, left, Alec Bolanos and Aiden Bolanos stand alongside their vegetable garden in Miami, Fla. As the arrival of spring in the Northern Hemisphere coincides with orders to stay at home and out of crowds, the backyard garden has become a getaway for the mind in chaotic times. (Annika Bolanos via AP)

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In this March 22, 2020 photo, Ezra Gandy works in a garden at his home in South Fulton, Ga., with his grandmother Melanie Nunnally. As the arrival of spring coincides with orders to stay at home and out of crowds, the backyard garden offers families a beneficial activity and has become a getaway for the mind in chaotic times. (Brittaney Nunnally via AP)

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In this March 30, 2020 photo, Hollie Niblett is stands in her garden at her home in Overland Park, Kan. Amid the coronavirus outbreak, backyard gardens are turning into a getaway for the mind in chaotic times. (Maya Niblett via AP)

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Dig. Plant. Breathe.

As spring's arrival in the Northern Hemisphere coincides with government stay-at-home orders, the itch to get outside has turned backyard gardens into a getaway for the mind in chaotic times.

Gardeners who already know that working with soil is a way to connect with nature say it helps take away their worries, at least temporarily.

“I love to see things grow,” Lindsay Waldrop said. "It’s incredibly therapeutic.”

Now more than ever.

Waldrop, a resident of Anaheim, California, has an anxiety disorder. Exercise is supposed to help, but her new job as a college biology professor had prevented her from getting into a routine.

Her grandfather, who introduced her to gardening by showing her how to plant seeds, died about a year ago.

Add the global coronavirus pandemic to all that, and it's easy to see where her focus is these days.

“Sometimes I just like to sit and dig holes in the quiet with my own thoughts,” she said. “Outside, it takes my mind off. It gives something for my hands to do. It gives you a separate problem to think about than whatever else is going on. It gets you off of social media."

Waldrop and her husband moved last summer from New Mexico, where she didn't have much luck gardening in a scorching climate. At her new home, she got rid of the lawn, installed an irrigation system, and recently planted dozens of tomatoes, eggplant, peppers and other vegetables.

Over the years, Waldrop converted her skeptical husband, who initially wondered why digging in the dirt and moving things around was considered fun.

After tasting his first home-grown tomatoes, he was converted.

Families, too, are discovering that gardening gives cooped-up kids something to do, builds their self-esteem and brings variety to what has suddenly become a lot of time spent together.

In Miami, Annika Bolanos isn't a fan of the south Florida heat and mosquitoes. But going outdoors lately has been a lifeline.

Bolanos works at home making cakes and doing bookkeeping with her husband's golf cart business. Her three young children add an extra layer of busy, and together they've seeded a variety of vegetables and herbs.

“We have always loved the idea of growing our own food," Bolanos said. "It feels good to eat something that you grew yourself too. It also helps my kids eat more fruits and veggies since they find it cool to eat what they have grown.”

Her children water the plants daily and concentrate on what's growing.

“You're feeling the sun and the breeze and don't have to worry about anything in the moment," Bolanos said.

In Britain and Germany, there's a premium on allotments — popular parcels of land rented for growing food crops.

"Those with a garden are the lucky ones," said Heidi Schaletzky, standing on the lawn beneath a cherry tree in the north of Berlin.

Schaletzky and her husband have been cultivating a plot in the ``Free Country" community garden for the past eight years, growing strawberries, salad greens and kohlrabi. So far, access to garden plots remains exempt from restrictions intended to stop the spread of the virus in Germany.

"We'll be able to see other people, too," she said. “As long as they stay on their side of the fence.”

As the weather warms, garden shops are bustling as other businesses shut during the outbreak.

At the Almaden Valley Nursery in San Jose, California, rose expert John Harp has seen a mix of new gardeners and regulars. Customers can't come into the shop, so their online orders are brought to their vehicles in the parking lot.

“Around town everyone is gardening right now,” Harp said. “They're looking to be a little bit more self-sufficient."

This home-grown attitude goes back to World War II, when millions of people cultivated victory gardens to protect against potential food shortages while boosting patriotism and morale.

Hollie Niblett, who lives near Kansas City, Kansas, hopes the victory gardens come back. Niblett, who has a degree in horticultural therapy, tends to a kitchen garden near her backdoor, perennial flowers, flowering trees and shrubs, and upper and lower grassy yards connected by a path through an area left in its natural condition.

“There are so many things about it that feed my soul,'' she said. "Right now, more than anything, my garden gives me hope, gives me purpose and provides a sense of connection to something bigger than myself.”

For beginners, wonderment awaits. Just south of Atlanta, 10-year-old Ezra Gandy's love for playing baseball has been paused. He and his grandmother, Melanie Nunnally, recently started an outdoor garden, planting strawberries, cabbage, broccoli, kale and asparagus.

"I like digging in the dirt because I like to see all the bugs and stuff that's in the ground,” he said.

The nonprofit group KidsGardening.org suggests that children grow their own salads or do other activities.

The virus scare could even usher in a new crop of gardeners who start from seed rather than risk the crowds buying starter plants.

Kendra Schilling of Scott Depot, West Virginia, doesn't have space for a sprawling garden, so she's planting potatoes in a bucket and trying to figure out with her teenage daughter what to do with other vegetable seeds.

"I usually go buy the plants and stick them in the dirt. But this year we're going to try to do the seeds,'' she says. ``Thank God for YouTube.”

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Associated Press writer Frank Jordans in Berlin contributed to this report.

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