Quick Summary
- People gardened to relieve stress, anxiety, depression
- People saw gardening as way to safely socialize, grow food for community
- Report suggests more 鈥榞reen鈥 opportunities needed during disasters
People who turned to gardening during the COVID-19 pandemic did so to relieve stress, connect with others and grow their own food in hopes of avoiding the virus, according to a survey conducted by researchers at the University of California, Davis, UC Agriculture and Natural Resources (UCANR) and international partners.
The survey , 鈥淕ardening during COVID-19: experiences from gardeners around the world,鈥 highlights the positive role gardening plays in mental and physical health, said Alessandro Ossola, an assistant professor of plant sciences.
鈥淐onnection to nature, relaxation and stress relief were by far the biggest reasons gardeners cited,鈥 Ossola said.
The researchers sent links to online surveys via targeted emails to gardening groups, in newsletters and on social media between June and August 2020. They were hoping to gauge the significance of gardening as a way to cope with risk, how the pandemic changed gardening and what barriers existed.
More than 3,700 surveys were returned by gardeners from Australia, Germany and the United States.
Isolation, depression, anxiety reported
More than half of those responding said they felt isolated, anxious and depressed during the early days of the pandemic, and 81% had concerns about food access. During this time, people also had more time to garden, and they saw the activity as a safe haven and a way to connect socially with others.
鈥淣ot only did gardeners describe a sense of control and security that came from food production, but they also expressed heightened experiences of joy, beauty and freedom in garden spaces,鈥 said the report, which broke up responses by region or states.
In California, for instance, 33% of gardeners said their plots generated about 25% of their produce needs. Some gardeners with access to large spots to garden also grew food for their community.
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Gardening during the pandemic offered a way to socialize safely.
鈥淧eople found new connections in the garden,鈥 said Lucy Diekmann, an urban agriculture and food systems advisor with UCANR who helped write the report. 鈥淚t became a shared hobby as opposed to an individual one.鈥
Responses were fairly similar across all locations, even though the surveys hit in the summer and winter depending on location. 鈥淲e see remarkable similarities in terms of what people are saying and the way they are interacting with their gardens,鈥 she said.
More green opportunities needed
Many respondents also found it hard to find and buy seeds or plants and locate a spot to grow.
The report findings suggest an opportunity for government, community groups, businesses and others to promote community health by providing green spaces.
Gardening should be thought of as a public health need, one that could serve communities well in future pandemics or disasters. , Canada and some countries in Europe write for people to garden to improve health.
鈥淲e need to change the narrative of how urban gardening is framed and elevate it to a key strategy for both environmental and public health,鈥 Ossola said.
嘿嘿视频 graduate student Summer Cortez assisted with the research, as did Monika Egerer at the Technical University of Munich in Germany and experts from these Australian-based entities: Brenda Lin at Commonwealth Science and Industrial Research Organization, Jonathan Kingsley at Swinburne University of Technology and Pauline Marsh at University of Tasmania.
Media Resources
Media Contacts:
- Alessandro Ossola, Department of Plant Sciences, 530-754-4407, aossola@ucdavis.edu
- Lucy Diekmann, UC Agriculture and Natural Resources, 408-282-3104, lodiekmann@ucanr.edu
- Emily C. Dooley, College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, 530-650-6807 , ecdooley@ucdavis.edu
- Amy Quinton, 嘿嘿视频 News and Media Relations, 530-601-8077, amquinton@ucdavis.edu