
Gardeners may be familiar
with the sense of calm and peace that can come from relaxing in a patch
of fragrant and colorful flowers. It’s little wonder that the gardens
have been harnessed for their therapeutic effects.
“Horticultural
therapy is about people, not the plants,” says University of Wisconsin
Extension Master Gardener program director, Mike Maddox. Maddox has
spent the latter part of his career teaching people how to connect to
each other using gardens as their medium. He explains, “Plants have
always been the cornerstone of our existence, they are in our DNA.”
In
reality, we do share a quarter of our genes with the rice plant and we
can learn about ourselves from studying plants’ DNA. But more
importantly, in horticultural therapy lingo, we have a natural
connection to plants and want to learn more about them.
University
of Illinois Extension horticulture educator Kelly Allsup developed a
sensory garden program to promote the horticultural therapy concept and
connect gardeners to nature. She demonstrates how much one uses their
senses in the following imagination exercise.
“Imagine
you are sitting in a garden. Any garden you can imagine. It can be a
garden you have been in before, the garden of your dreams, or a pretend
garden with purple trees.
“Look
at the sky. What color is it? Look at the flowers. What kind are they?
Oh look… Your favorite fruit is ready for picking. Is it an apple? A
strawberry? Is it sweet?
“Now
find a bench, sit and rest. Do you feel the sun on your face? The
breeze in your hair? You reach down to touch the leaves. Are they soft,
fuzzy, smooth or rough?
“What flowers do you smell? Do you smell the grass? Herbs? Soil? Water from the creek or fountain?
“What
do you hear? A waterfall? Birds bursting into song? Bees buzzing, or
squirrels scurrying? How do these sounds make you feel?
“You
suddenly hear someone walking towards you. It can be anybody. Someone
you have loved and lost. Someone you see every day. Someone who lives
far away. Someone famous. Someone funny. Someone kind. They sit next to
you on the bench to hold your hand.”
Was
this imagination exercise fun, emotional, exciting, or intriguing?
Thinking about the senses we use in a garden setting has caused some
gardeners to reevaluate what they are planting. Gardeners are using
plants to deepen their sensory experience of nature and some are using
the sight, taste, feel, smell, and sound of the garden to repair their
soul.
Therapy through
nature and horticulture has been trending, as we become a more holistic
society trying to reconnect to the natural world. Sensory plants may
benefit gardeners with impaired sensory functions, children who have
difficulty expressing themselves, people with disabilities or some who
just want a positive experience not created on a screen. “A
gardener recently told me he didn’t care what the plant looked like
anymore, but wanted to smell his garden,” Allsup recalls.
As you continue your gardening endeavors this season, think about some of the following plants that may enliven the senses.
For
taste, plant flowers like stevia, daylilies, hibiscus, sunflowers,
nasturtiums and borage. Or plant vegetables like lettuce, Swiss chard,
peas, spinach, arugula, beet greens, chives and herbs. Be sure the
garden has not been sprayed with pesticides before nibbling.
For
feel, plant annuals like sensitive plant, succulents, licorice plants,
silver falls, dusty miller and chenille plant. Or choose perennials like
silver mound, lambs ear, fountain grass and Irish moss.
For
smell, pick herbs like rosemary, lemon verbena, lavender, chocolate
mint, scented geraniums and patchouli plant. Annuals like heliotrope,
flowering tobacco, four-o-clocks, sweet alyssum, popcorn plants and
ageratum are good choices. Or plant perennials like viburnum, abelia,
lilac, plumeria, witch hazel, catmint, sweet shrub and creeping phlox.
For sound, add grasses, wind chimes, water features or a birdbath. What senses are awakened when you walk through your garden?
For more information on therapeutic horticulture provided by Mike Maddox please visit http://fyi.uwex.edu/therapeutichorticulture/.