Garden Centers La Quinta CA

This page provides useful content and local businesses that can help with your search for Garden Centers. You will find helpful, informative articles about Garden Centers, including "Want to Get in Shape? Start Gardening". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in La Quinta, CA that will answer all of your questions about Garden Centers.

The Living Desert Zoo & Gardens
(760)-346-5694
47900 Portola Avenue
Palm Desert, CA
A Green Thumb Landscape Consulting
(619) 269-9501
4856 Date Street
San Diego, CA
Armstrong Garden Centers, Inc.
619-442-9281
1755 E Main St
El Cajon, CA
Middlebrook Gardens
(408) 292-9993
76 Race Street
San Jose, CA
Armstrong Garden Centers, Inc.
949-644-9510
1500 E Coast Hwy
Newport Beach, CA
SMALL VENUE PALM SPRINGS
(760) 325-2789
651 S Calle Palo Fierro
Palm Springs, CA
Swigard's Hardware, Inc.
(530) 583-3738
200 N Lake Blvd
Tahoe City, CA
Flower Hut Nursery
916-591-4616
2229 Golden Gate Dr
Plumas Lake, CA
San Francisco Landscapes Corporation
(415) 585-9137
P.O. Box 170182
San Francisco, CA
Cornerstone Garden Center
661-366-3747
2816 Weedpatch Highway
Bakersfield, CA
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Want to Get in Shape? Start Gardening

Want a fun way to exercise? Then try gardening and its unique sense of satisfaction you get from digging in the dirt, transplanting your favorite perennials, or cutting homegrown flowers for summer bouquets.

Even your kids will love it - and eating the healthy veggies that they help grow.

But just don't think of gardening as just a hobby. Health experts say that flower-and-vegetable gardening and all sorts of lawncare can help get you fit. What's more, older women who garden have stronger bones than women doing every other type of exercise except weightlifting, according to at least one study.

Going nonstop

Charlie Nardozzi, a senior horticulturist with the National Gardening Association in South Burlington, Vt., isn't surprised by all the research backing up the health benefits of gardening. And, he adds, adding in these higher-level activities can raise the heart rate and increase the number of calories burned.

"Gardening is good exercise because it exercises a variety of muscle groups," Nardozzi says. "Most garden activities are moderate, such as raking, planting flowers, moving soil, or dragging bags of soil, but if you do a variety of these nonstop for 30 minutes, that constitutes a workout."

Of course, check with your doctor first before taking on any of these activities, some of which are pretty strenuous and can test your heart. 

Preventing bone loss

In addition to the calories you'll burn, you may also be preventing bone loss, says Dr. Lori Turner, a scientist at the University of Alabama's  Center for Metabolic Bone Disease in Tuscaloosa. In 2003, Turner studied what types of physical activity, including jogging, aerobics, swimming, gardening, among others, led to the strongest bones.

"The two activities that correlated with the highest bone density were weight-training and gardening," she says. "The exciting part for me was to find an activity that people like to do."

Moreover, the more people like to do an activity, the more they are likely to do it. Because garden fans  often set out with a specific goal in mind, they tend to do it longer, which might help explain the study results, Turner adds.

In addition to burning calories and maintaining bone strength, gardening also has other benefits. For starters, it gets people out in the sun, which helps the skin produce vitamin D.

Immediate gratification, satisfaction

There's also the immediate gratification of seeing the results...

Click here to read more from Quality Health