My Garden Self-Care Routine
My Garden Self-Care Routine — What I Do After Every Session Outside
It took me years to build this ritual. Now I wouldn't skip it for anything.
I used to come inside from the garden, wash my hands, and collapse on the couch. That was it. No ritual, no recovery, no acknowledgment that my body had just spent two hours in the sun pulling, digging, and tending.
Then one summer I had a bad week — sunburned shoulders, cracked hands, and skin that felt like sandpaper — and I realized I was pouring all this care into the garden and absolutely none of it back into myself. Something had to change.
So I built a routine. It doesn't take long — maybe 15 minutes after a morning session. But it has completely transformed how I feel about gardening and how my skin and hands look and feel. This is what I actually do, step by step.
The After-Garden Ritual
Cool Water Rinse — Before You Even Think About Soap
The first thing I do when I come inside is run cool water over my hands and forearms for about 30 seconds. Not cold — cool. It brings down any irritation from sun exposure and starts lifting surface soil before soap strips your skin's natural oils. This small step makes everything that comes after work better.
Then I use a nail brush — just a simple one — to clean under my nails properly. If you skip this step and go straight to cream, you're sealing dirt in. Not ideal.
A Gentle but Effective Hand Wash
I switched from regular soap to a moisturizing hand wash a few years ago and the difference is real. Regular soap — even nice soap — can be incredibly drying when you're washing your hands multiple times a day. A formula with glycerin or shea butter leaves your hands clean without stripping them.
Hand Cream While Hands Are Still Slightly Damp
This is the single most important tip I can give you. Apply your hand cream while your hands are still slightly damp from washing — not dripping, just not bone dry. The moisture helps the cream absorb faster and more deeply. If you wait until your hands are completely dry, you're working against yourself.
I keep O'Keeffe's Working Hands right next to my garden sink for daytime use. It's not glamorous but it works better than anything else I've tried for the kind of wear gardening puts on hands.
Face — SPF First, Always
Zone 9 sun is not gentle. I used to be cavalier about sunscreen and I regret every single time I skipped it. Now EltaMD UV Clear goes on every morning before I go outside, no exceptions. It's lightweight, doesn't leave a white cast, and actually works. If I've been out for more than an hour, I reapply.
After gardening, I mist my face with a hydrating spray — just something to rehydrate and settle the skin before I put anything else on. Then moisturizer.
The Evening Wind-Down — The Overnight Treatment
Before bed, I do the full treatment. A richer hand cream — usually L'Occitane Shea Butter or Burt's Bees Hand Salve — applied generously, then a pair of thin cotton gloves over the top. I know it sounds like something your grandmother did, but the results after just one night are genuinely visible. Soft, smooth, recovered hands.
I also apply a nourishing facial oil or overnight cream. After a full day that started in the garden, my skin needs something restorative rather than just hydrating.
Zone 9 Garden Guides
Month-by-month printable guides covering what to plant, prune, and tend in a Zone 9 California garden.
Visit The Shop →The garden gives so much — the beauty, the quiet, the satisfaction of something growing under your care. Building a small ritual to give something back to yourself isn't indulgent. It's just good sense.
I hope something here finds its way into your routine. What do you do after your garden sessions? I'd genuinely love to know. 🌿
— From my garden to yours
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