Strengthen your knees to help manage osteoarthritis pain.

10 Tips to Help You Dig in to Painless Gardening

Gardening is one of life's simple pleasures. Nothing beats eating foods you've grown yourself, watching seedlings finally flower or simply reliving the childhood pleasure of playing in the dirt. But gardening can be tough work that could add strain to knees already sore with osteoarthritis. Try the following to minimize the strain on your joints and make gardening great again.

Knee Exercise - Painless Gardening Tips - Be Prepared

#1 - Be prepared

Take a brisk five-minute walk before tackling the garden. Also take time to stretch your chest, neck, shoulders, back and legs.
Knee Exercise - Painless Gardening Tips - Aim High

#2 - Aim high

You can forget squatting and bending if you build raised beds. Stand with your arms to your sides. Where the tips of your fingers hit is the perfect height for the top of the flowerbed. Enlist the help of a landscaper or neighbor to build the flowerbeds.
Knee Exercise - Painless Gardening Tips - Plant Perennials

#3 - Plant perennials

They require less maintenance than annuals and will not need to be replanted each year, saving you time, effort and money. With proper mulching to stave off weeds, perennials are plant-them-once, love-them-forever plants.
Knee Exercise - Painless Gardening Tips - Comfortable Tools

#4 - Invest in comfortable gardening tools

Rakes and shovels with padded handles ease gripping force, and long handles reduce the need for stooping and bending. They also provide increased leverage, which means less strain on your hands and back.
Knee Exercise - Painless Gardening Tips - How to Sit or Kneel

#5 - Sit or kneel comfortably

When you must kneel, use a pad to soften the impact, and brace yourself with one arm while you garden with the other. This takes some weight off your back, but may not be possible if joints in your arm, wrist or hands are sore. Experiment with other comfortable positions, or try using a garden seat-scooter to eliminate the need for kneeling.
Knee Exercise - Painless Gardening Tips - Correct Posture

#6 - Practice correct posture

Let your larger/stronger joints do the work when possible. Instead of using your fingers to lift an object, try using the palm of your hand, your forearms or even your elbows. Keep items close to your body as you carry them. Stand up straight when you work, and change positions often.
Knee Exercise - Painless Gardening Tips - Get Rolling

#7 - Get rolling

Use a large-wheeled cart or child's wagon to move plants and mulch around with ease. A wagon with removable sides is ideal for loading and unloading.
Knee Exercise - Painless Gardening Tips - Easy Watering

#8 - Make watering easier

Connect a hose at each of your home's outdoor water spigots to avoid having to lug heavy hoses from spigot to spigot when watering plants in your front, side and back yard. Or, if you can afford it, hire a landscaper to install an in-ground sprinkler system. The ease of use will far outweigh the cost.
Knee Exercise - Painless Gardening Tips - Think Inside the Box

#9 - Think inside the box

If space or energy doesn't permit a large flowerbed, try planting flower boxes, large waist-high containers or even pots of flowers or herbs to sit on your windowsills.
Knee Exercise - Painless Gardening Tips - Stop & Smell the Roses

#10 - Stop and smell the roses

Take plenty of water breaks. Well-earned frequent breaks allow you to appreciate your garden's beauty, plan your next tasks and get more done before fatigue sets in.

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PLEASE NOTE: This article is presented for informational purposes only and is not meant to take the place of the advice of your doctor. By providing you with this information, Genzyme Corporation is not endorsing its content. You should consult with your doctor before starting any new health regimen.

Adapted from Arthritis Today®, the health magazine published by the Arthritis Foundation®. The views presented herein are solely those of Arthritis Today and their publisher the Arthritis Foundation. Genzyme Corporation does not have any input in, or editorial control over Arthritis Today and is not responsible for its content. Arthritis Today is a registered trademark of the Arthritis Foundation.

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Knee Exercise Videos

Watch these simple exercises, designed specifically for knees with osteoarthritis, and add them to your daily routine.

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Indication

Synvisc-One® (hylan G-F 20) and SYNVISC® (hylan G-F 20) are indicated for the treatment of pain in osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee in patients who have failed to respond adequately to conservative non-pharmacologic therapy and simple analgesics, e.g., acetaminophen.

Important Safety Information

Before trying Synvisc-One or SYNVISC, tell your doctor if you are allergic to products from birds — such as feathers, eggs or poultry — or if your leg is swollen or infected. Synvisc-One and SYNVISC are only for injection into the knee, performed by a doctor or other qualified health care professional. Synvisc-One and SYNVISC have not been tested to show pain relief in joints other than the knee. Talk to your doctor before resuming strenuous weight-bearing activities after treatment. Synvisc-One and SYNVISC have not been tested in children, pregnant women or women who are nursing. You should tell your doctor if you think you are pregnant or if you are nursing a child. The side effects most commonly seen when Synvisc-One or SYNVISC is injected into the knee were pain, swelling and/or fluid buildup in or around the knee. Cases where the swelling is extensive or painful should be discussed with your doctor. Allergic reactions such as rash and hives have been reported rarely.

View the Complete Prescribing Information for Synvisc-One (PDF)
View the Complete Prescribing Information for SYNVISC (PDF)