Gardening can trigger back pain because it combines repeated bending, twisting, lifting, kneeling, reaching and carrying. The risk often increases in spring when people suddenly do several hours of garden work after a quieter winter. Warming up gently, changing tasks often, lifting with the load close, avoiding repeated twisting and taking breaks before pain builds can all help.
Local note: This guide is written for gardeners across Bedford, Bedfordshire, Milton Keynes and Buckinghamshire who are getting back into spring gardening, allotments, lawn care, outdoor DIY and weekend garden projects.
Spring gardening can be brilliant for your health, mood and mobility, but it can also catch your back by surprise.
After a quieter winter, a long session of digging, weeding, lifting compost, mowing, pruning or bending over flower beds can overload muscles and joints that have not done that kind of work for a while.
The good news is that gardening does not have to automatically mean back pain. A little preparation, better pacing and a few changes to how you lift, bend and rest can make a real difference.
If pain persists, spreads into the leg, keeps returning or worries you, a proper assessment may help you understand what is going on and what to do next.
National Gardening Week runs from 27 April to 3 May 2026, so this is a good moment for gardeners across Bedford, Bedfordshire, Milton Keynes and Buckinghamshire to get ready for the season sensibly.