Gardening can be a very rewarding way of keeping active in order to maintain and improve fitness and wellbeing. There is a wide range of gardening activities – some are lighter and easier to do, others are more strenuous and may be more challenging. Different fitness levels are required to tackle different gardening tasks.
It is sensible to start with lighter tasks e.g. deadheading flowers and light pruning rather than anything that involves bending, digging, pushing and heavy lifting. You may need to build up your flexibility stamina, strength and balance to be able to carry out some gardening tasks, but as your fitness improves, you will be able to progress to more challenging activities. As with any activity, start low and go slow, build up gradually and pace yourself. Do not try to do too much at first, progress slowly over a few weeks. Starting will vary depending on your own circumstances and a specific heart condition.
For example:
If you have a pacemaker or Implantable Cardioverter Device (ICD) –
ICDs in particular –
If you have had open-heart surgery –
It depends on what you plan to do, but the gardening tasks performed should be easier to do at the beginning and at the end, e.g. start and finish with easier activities such as potting, light weeding, planting out seedlings, tidying up beds, and light pruning.
You should feel comfortable and able to continue with the activity. You should not feel so breathless that you cannot talk.
It is fine to feel that you are exerting yourself, but if you find yourself struggling, try to make tasks easier or do less when you are in the garden. If you feel exhausted following your gardening session, you may have done too much or the activity may have
been too demanding for you.
If you have attended cardiac rehabilitation, think about how you feel compared with how you felt in the exercise sessions – your level of exertion should be similar.
Note: The information provided in this article is not intended to replace the advice that your doctor or cardiac rehabilitation team has given you, based on their expert knowledge of your condition.
This guide is based on available evidence and expert opinion and is produced by the Association of Chartered Physiotherapists in Cardiac Rehabilitation.