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How gardening can make you seven kilograms lighter

Those who spend their free time pruning the roses or pottering in the veggie patch are at least one dress size trimmer than their non-gardening neighbours.  

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FEELING a tad flabby? Get off the sofa and into the garden.

Those who spend their free time pruning the roses or pottering in the veggie patch are considerably trimmer than their non-gardening neighbours, a study showed.

Green-fingered women were a dress size smaller, while men who go to an allotment can expect to be around a stone lighter.

The researchers said that exercise is not the only benefit to be reaped by getting out into the garden - home-grown fruit and veg can make your diet healthier into the bargain.

Previous studies have credited gardening with a host of benefits, from raising zest for life to boosting happiness. In the latest, the University of Utah researchers compared the vital statistics of almost 200 men and women who had tended plots for at least a year with the measurements of those who lived nearby.

The two groups had access to the same leisure facilities, such as parks, and had a similar economic status. Yet the gardeners were clearly thinner, the Journal of Public Health reports.

The men were 62 per cent less likely to be overweight or obese as those who gardened, while the women were 46 per cent less likely to have a weight problem.

The analysis also showed that a woman who was a fairly average 5ft 5in tall and gardened was on average five kilograms lighter than a non-gardening female neighbour. This equates to around a dress size.

Similarly, a 5ft 10in man who gardened was on average seven kilograms, or just over a stone, lighter.

The study found that the differences could not be explained away by good genes, as non-gardening brothers and sisters were not as trim.

However, husbands and wives appeared to benefit from the fruits of their spouse"s labour, possibly because they helped out in the garden or ate the produce at home.

Lead author Cathleen Zick, professor of family and consumer studies, said that having an allotment may be particularly beneficial, as people may feel extra pressure to keep their plots looking nice. However, she expects tending a normal garden to also be good for weight.

Professor Zick, who has "a small backyard garden", cautioned that her data was drawn from a single community.

But despite this, she said her results could be "of interest to urban planners, public health officials and others focused on designing new neighbourhoods".

She added: "We know that obesity is costly. This study begins to shed light on the costs and benefits of the choices families make about eating and physical activity."
 

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/home/how-gardening-can-make-you-seven-kilograms-lighter/news-story/a1eadc7be014f57f262e88e56e76c463