NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

The impulse to garden in hard times has deep roots

  • Written by Jennifer Atkinson, Senior Lecturer, Environmental Studies, University of Washington
During coronavirus lockdowns, gardens have served as an escape from feelings of alienation.Richard Bord/Getty Images

The coronavirus pandemic has set off a global gardening boom.

In the early days of lockdown, seed suppliers were depleted of inventory and reported “unprecedented” demand. Within the U.S., the trend has beencompared to...

Read more: The impulse to garden in hard times has deep roots

More Articles ...

  1. Why the WHO, often under fire, has a tough balance to strike in its efforts to address health emergencies
  2. Spring signals female bees to lay the next generation of pollinators
  3. The 'first scientist's 800-year-old tonic for what ails us: The truth
  4. Why are kids asking such big questions during the pandemic?
  5. We found and tested 47 old drugs that might treat the coronavirus: Results show promising leads and a whole new way to fight COVID-19
  6. Why apparel brands' efforts to police their supply chains aren't working
  7. Coronavirus: Why is it so hard to aid small businesses hurt by a disaster?
  8. Infected with the coronavirus but not showing symptoms? A physician answers 5 questions about asymptomatic COVID-19
  9. Language differences spark fear amid the coronavirus pandemic
  10. Refugees tell stories of problems – and unity – in facing the coronavirus
  11. How could an explosive Big Bang be the birth of our universe?
  12. How Apple and Google will let your phone warn you if you've been exposed to the coronavirus
  13. Masks and distancing make it tough for the hard-of-hearing, but here's how to help
  14. Can your community handle a natural disaster and coronavirus at the same time?
  15. Brazilian mystics say they're sent by aliens to 'jump-start human evolution' – but their vision for a more just society is not totally crazy
  16. Endangered tigers face growing threats from an Asian road-building boom
  17. Archaeologists have a lot of dates wrong for North American indigenous history – but we're using new techniques to get it right
  18. Empty pews take a financial toll on many US congregations
  19. I was a nurse on the front lines of Ebola, and I saw that nurses need support for the trauma and pain they experience
  20. Wait times remain stubbornly long in hospital emergency rooms
  21. Top football recruits bring in big money for colleges – COVID-19 could threaten revenue
  22. Are we living in a dystopia?
  23. What does 'survival of the fittest' mean in the coronavirus pandemic? Look to the immune system
  24. As states weigh human lives versus the economy, history suggests the economy often wins
  25. Scientist at work: Trapping urban coyotes to see if they can be 'hazed' away from human neighborhoods
  26. Very good dogs don't necessarily make very good co-workers
  27. Climate change threatens drinking water quality across the Great Lakes
  28. Why are white supremacists protesting to 'reopen' the US economy?
  29. Kids have a right to a basic education, according to a new legal milestone
  30. COVID-19 is a dress rehearsal for entrepreneurial approaches to climate change
  31. How the Trump administration accidentally insured over 200,000 through Obamacare
  32. 3 volunteering guidelines to heed during the coronavirus pandemic
  33. 3 crisis-leadership lessons from Abraham Lincoln
  34. Measuring maternal grief in Africa
  35. Who's at risk of not being counted in the 2020 census: 6 essential reads
  36. Scientists at work: Uncovering the mystery of when and where sharks give birth
  37. Coronavirus impact: Meat processing plants weigh risks of prosecution if they're blamed for spreading infection
  38. Welcome to your sensory revolution, thanks to the pandemic
  39. Failure to count COVID-19 nursing home deaths could dramatically skew US numbers
  40. Lethargic global response to COVID-19: How the human brain's failure to assess abstract threats cost us dearly
  41. 5 things college students should include in a plan for their wellness
  42. How the US military could help fight the coronavirus outbreak
  43. 5 lessons from the coronavirus about inequality in America
  44. A global mask shortage may leave farmers and farm workers exposed to toxic pesticides
  45. From pews to patients – churches have long served as hospitals, particularly in times of crisis
  46. Jewish history explains why some ultra-Orthodox communities defy coronavirus restrictions
  47. Coronavirus bailouts will cost taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars – unlike past corporate rescues that actually made money for the US Treasury
  48. The coronavirus genome is like a shipping label that lets epidemiologists track where it's been
  49. Are people with pets less likely to die if they catch the coronavirus?
  50. How to listen to your loved ones with empathy when you yourself are feeling the strain of social distancing