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Forest Bathing Quick Tip: 8 Sit Spot Seat Cover Ideas

Forest Bathing Sit Spot Cover

 

There’s nothing worse than a wet bottom when you head out to your sit spot after a rain.

Okay, there’s a LOT worse than that…but, you know, let’s just say wet sit spots can be an issue for forest bathers.

Something that might even stop you from sitting for awhile.

And I would never wish that for you…

Because sitting for awhile is tantamount for getting the most out of your forest bathing experience.

So, today I have a few sit spot seat cover ideas to help you forest bathe in comfort.

 

 


{Watch the video version}

Factors to consider

First of all, let me just preface this by saying, don’t ever feel like you need to make this any more complicated than it needs to be. Remember, forest bathing is all about…

Open forest. Insert human.

You can certainly sit right on top of a log like a real woodsy person. No need to complicate this.

However, as a practiced forest bather, I know from experience there are times when the ground is just a little too mushy to sit directly on. And if you don’t have something available to sit on, you might skip it altogether.

So, for goodness sakes, bring along a barrier to put between your jeans and a damp stump.

Just make sure you have the right option for you:

  • Think about the size of your barrier: do you want to sprawl out? Are others accompanying you?
  • Determine how much you really want to carry out into the woods.
  • Consider how wet it really is, or could be, in your sit spot. If it’s usually damp, the extra effort is worth it.
  • Your seat cover should have some level of water resistance to it such as vinyl or plastic.
  • How cushy do you want to get? If you want to lie down in the grass, you may appreciate more coverage and/or a little padding. If pretzel-legged minimalism is your style, a simple plastic bag will suffice.

So, let’s take a peek at some simple sit spot seat cover ideas you could probably find in your house today…

 

8 Forest Bathing Sit Spot Cover Ideas

  1. Plastic bag
  2. Garden kneeler
  3. Stadium seat
  4. Outdoor chair cushion
  5. Picnic blanket
  6. Vinyl/oilcloth DIY cushion
  7. Tablecloth (great for sharing or sprawling)
  8. Shower curtain

Plastic Bag

The good old plastic shopping bag. It’s the perfect sit spot cover. This is my favored choice because you can easily carry the bag in your pocket and it provides a simple dampness barrier.

Garden Kneeler

I found this super cute garden kneeler in the dollar section at Target. This is the cover I use most often at home because it’s lightweight, easy to carry, and lends a bit of a cushioned effect.

Stadium Seat

One of those padded stadium seats would be the perfect sit spot cover because they’re water resistant and padded and usually easy to carry.

Outdoor Chair Cushion

Patio chair covers are also meant to be weather resistant and make your sit spot so much more comfortable. They’re pretty easy to find in the summer, just check the lawn and garden department.

Picnic Blanket

Picnic blankets usually have a water-resistant side and a comfortable cloth side. They also offer much more surface area to sprawl out, if that’s what you prefer. Mine has a zippered pocket and a handle, so I can use it to carry whatever I need.

DIY cushion

I’m sure you creatives out there could design a cute DIY seat cushion using vinyl or oilcloth. This way, you could add whatever features are most important to you and personalize the look and amount of cushioning you want.

Tablecloth

Plastic or oilcloth tablecloths are another option that roll up even tighter than a picnic blanket but offer lots more surface area to sprawl out. You should be able to find a simple tablecloth at a dollar store.

Shower Curtain

Similar to a tablecloth, a shower curtain offers lots of room to stretch and keeps you dry. The simple dollar store versions fold down into pocket size and are perfect for single use if you don’t want to clean all the mud off after a particularly messy outing (be careful though because the single-use method isn’t eco-friendly).

Other ideas

I’m sure you can find something around the house to use as a sit spot cover. As I was looking around my house, I noticed a few more items that could be used too:

  • Foam kickboard for the pool
  • Diaper changing pad
  • Plastic sheeting
  • Deflated pool floatie
  • Small personal sled

 

Hopefully this post gives you some valuable ideas to make your next forest bathing session just a bit more pleasurable.

I’d love to hear about your creative forest bathing sit spot covers. Post them in the Facebook group and let everyone else know what you came up with in the comments. 

The Thinking Tree: Brain Catharsis in the Forest

forest bathing invitation

 

On my birthday, all I asked for was a day alone in the woods.

That’s all I really wanted.

It just felt right.

You can probably guess why.

We lead really interrupted lives. 

When I’m home alone for several days with children, for example, I start to realize just how interrupted I am.

I can’t start a project,

Read a page in a book,

Watch a Youtube video,

Start an Amazon order,

Write a blog post,

Experience a meditation…

Without being interrupted approximately 12,382 times.

Just by the kids.

That’s not even counting the ads, the outside influences, the phone, the dogs, etc.

Ultimately…

I cannot start a thought and finish it to completion.

How often are your thoughts interrupted?

 

Do you know where you can start a thought and finish it to completion?

The forest.

Or perhaps a sensory deprivation tank.

But that costs and takes more effort to organize.

Forest bathing is free and accessible.

So, to the forest I went.

 

And I did a few practices there to allow my thoughts to flow uninterrupted.

I found a sit spot off the trail in case anyone else was on the trails.

I flipped my phone to silent,

And I started a mindfulness exercise by concentrating on one leaf on a stump. I returned to that same leaf every time my thoughts started to wander.

I also focused on my breathing, taking in the minty fresh air.

After grounding myself like this, I finally did allow my mind to wander.

I also brought my journal and other writing paper in case I needed to brainstorm and wring out my soaked mind.

And it was glorious!

A novelty really.

To sit quietly and allow the forest to focus me rather than allowing my focus to be stolen from me.

 

The next time you’re in need of a mind break (and it takes some intentional focus to even notice when this is happening), find your thinking tree.

 

The Thinking Tree Exercise

  1. Find a quiet sit spot [learn about sit spots here] in the forest, a park, or your yard. Ideally away from passersby and other distractions.
  2. Take up to 10 minutes to settle in, taking deep breaths.
  3. Find a spot to focus. Could be something like the tip of a plant, a certain leaf, or a pebble. Every time your mind starts to wander, bring your attention back to your focus spot.
  4. Once you’re grounded and your mind has quieted, shift into thinking mode. Don’t force thought, just allow your mind to wander and your thoughts to focus wherever they will.
  5. Keep a notebook handy to write down any ideas you want to remember later.
  6. Just allow your thoughts and follow them wherever they lead.
  7. If something has been weighing heavily on your mind, it will probably naturally come in. Let it. Oftentimes, nature is a great place to find solutions or perspective for those problems. If a question has been bugging you lately or you need clarity on a decision, let it in. If everything is going well, let it in. Give your mind space to think about whatever it gravitates toward. Only try to steer your thought process toward the productive, not the limiting.
  8. When you feel like you’ve reached the completion of this exercise, however long that takes, close your eyes, take a few culminating breaths, and return to your normal routine.
  9. Take a moment to think about how good this exercise makes you feel, to follow thoughts without unwanted interruption.

 

Check out this Livestream where I explain the process in visual form.

 

As simple as this exercise sounds, the Thinking Tree exercise is profoundly cathartic. It’s brain catharsis. 

When you return home from this exercise, you should notice a sense of relief at allowing your brain to do its thing, uninterrupted.

You might find you’re able to concentrate better once your brain is wrung out.

You may have more patience.

You may feel a tangible sense of relief.

 

We all need those breaks from interruption.

 

Return to your thinking tree every time you need a break from over-stimulation, too much input, too much distraction, too much interruption.

 

I’d love to hear from you…come back and tell me about your experiences at The Thinking Tree.

Forest Bathing Breathing Techniques: 4 Ways!

4 Forest Bathing breathing techniques

 

Forest bathing is all about mindfulness, settling into nature’s patterns with a focus on noticing.

It’s an opportunity to break from frenzied daily life and take a breather.

That’s what this post is all about…taking a literal breather.

It only seems natural to incorporate breathing exercises into your forest bathing practice.

So, let’s go over a few breathing exercises to try the next time you go forest bathing and transform your experience.

But first, in case you’re wondering, why even bother?

 

Benefits of Breathing Exercises

Breathing is an involuntary process, so what’s the point of forcing it? Well, your breathing is closely linked to how stressed or calm you feel. You can literally force your body into a more relaxed, present state by taking control of your breath.

Breathing exercises have many other benefits for your body and mental state:

  • Clinically proven to reduce stress, swapping the sympathetic (fight-or-flight) for the parasympathetic (chillaxed) nervous system.
  • Builds oxygen levels in your blood
  • Lowers heart rate and blood pressure
  • Expands your lungs and opens them up to more phytoncides
  • Helps you get centered and grounded
  • Calibrates you to the pulse of the forest

Breathing exercises are the perfect companion to forest bathing because they deepen your sense of relaxation and focus. They help you flip on the “awareness” switch. Cultivating an awareness of your breath anchors you and carries over into your shinrin-yoku practice.

If you feel closely, you can sense your breath and pulse integrate into the rhythms of the forest.

 

Now that we’ve underscored the advantages of breathing exercises, lets learn a few core techniques.

 

4 Forest Bathing Breathing Techniques

  1. Belly breathing:
    To begin, close your eyes, place one hand on your belly and one on your chest, and take a deep breath in. Feel your belly fill and push against your hand while the ribs remain unmoving.
    Then, slowly let our your breath, feeling your belly deflate.
    Continue this process for 10 breaths, focusing solely on your breathing. If your mind wanders, gently guide it back to your breathing.
    On your last breath, open your eyes and bring your awareness back to the forest.

    When to use: when you want to relax and gently transition into your forest bathing. It’s also great when you feel like you’ve been subsisting on shallow breaths all day.

  2. Alt nostril breathing:
    Place the index and middle finger of one hand on either side of your nose. Block the left nostril and breathe in through your right. Then, block the right nostril and breathe out through the left. Perform this same breath pattern five times.
    Then, perform five breaths blocking the right nostril in the inhale and the left nostril on the exhale then alternate the pattern.

    When to use: when you want to come into a balance of feeling energized yet calm.

  3. Loud lion:
    Inhale deeply through your nose, then open your mouth as wide as you can, stick out your tongue, and breathe out with a forceful hhhhhhhh noise.
    Continue this breath pattern for 5 full breaths.
    The forest is a great place to practice this exercise without being seen.

    When to use: you feel tension in your mouth and jaw, especially after talking all day. It’s also great if you need to blow off some steam.

  4. 4-7-8 breathing:
    Breath in for a slow count of 4, hold your breath for 7 counts, and breathe out for 8 counts. Continue as long as you need to.

    When to use: this technique is the most relaxing exercise among the others. Use it to calm your nervous system, especially if you’ve had a rather stressful day.

Breathing exercises are a great to to use to help you transition from your harried everyday life into your forest bathing practice. Use them the next time you go out into nature and take a moment to notice how different you feel afterward.

Breathing exercises are also effective anytime you feel overwhelmed or stressed, such as before giving a presentation or when you’re in an argument. I also like to use breathing exercises to help me fall asleep at night. It’s an effective tool to have at your disposal!

{Ready to try forest bathing? Grab our free starter guide with 3 guided forest bathing invitations}

 

I’d love to hear your observations about how these breathing techniques improved your shinrin-yoku practice. Leave a comment below!

A Winter Forest Bathing Exercise

forest bathing in winter

What does winter remind you of?

Quick, right off the top of your head, you’re likely to come up with words like:

Hibernation.

Cold.

Snow.

Grayness.

Cold!

 

Many negative adjectives get attributed to winter such as dead, gray, cold, arctic, chilly, and barren.

As a Wisconsin native, I have my own aversions to winter. Being so far removed from the vibrating nature of summer makes me feel sad and closed off. I cringe in the late summer and fall, thinking about the oncoming weather changes.

I dread winter.

The outside world slows down and makes its way inside.

However, this year, I’ve tried to make a mental shift from the dread of winter to the opportunity in the season instead.

Of course, the life of trees holds the perfect metaphor for this.

 

Dormancy allows for maximum yield.

 

What happens to trees in winter?

It’s easy to think of the trees as “dead” in the winter. In fact, that’s often how we talk about them. But they’re far from dead!

The grueling conditions teach them how to thrive instead of die.

During their dormancy period, trees go through a slowing, self-preservation stage in order to proliferate come warmer weather.

An apple tree can’t produce a very good harvest unless they go through an adequate dormancy period.

Dormancy allows for maximum yield!

And even while the upper portions of trees stop growing in winter, their roots are very much alive and extending.

 

The metaphor is so perfect, it makes me a little giddy!

 

How to Human in the winter

The winter is the perfect time for humans to go inside too. Warm homes where we gather are where are roots also extend.

We need the period of rest and preservation to come alive in the summer.

We need the extremes of hot and cold to appreciate the full spectrum of temperature and season.

 

I mean, I think about the sheer work summer brings with it: the constant proliferation of weeds, the steady growth of lawn, the infiltration of bugs, the watering, and the number of activities I feel obligated to do outside while I can.

In winter, we can take a break from all those responsibilities and obligations. Let them lie in retreat under sheaths of snow.

We can focus on the activities that took a backseat in the summer, such as the waiting sewing projects, the interior repairs, the shelves of books that went unread.

That go-go-go energy of summer needs a balance of winter energy, just like the yin and yang, the masculine and feminine. Balance.

Winter is a slowing down and rooting, not a long, cold death.

The grueling conditions can teach us how to thrive instead of wither as well.

We don’t die slow deaths in the winter, like it feels like sometimes, we shed the layers that don’t serve us anymore and pay attention to what keeps us alive, not just physically but mentally too.

 

So, today, I offer you a winter forest bathing exercise to go along with this sentiment of rest and balance.

 

Winter Forest Bathing Exercise

  1. Head to your favorite nature space outside. Make sure you’re bundled up enough to stay warm and comfortable.
  2. Lean up against a tree or other natural structure and take a few large breaths, finding a deeper sense of relaxation with each breath. You may feel natural closing your eyes.
  3. Take a moment to identify with the tree or object holding you up. The intense process its undertaking at this very moment.
  4. Allow yourself to become drawn into the same process as you rest back-to-back. The turning inward. The slowing. The releasing of all the superfluous layers and stripping down to your true source of lifeblood. (The forest bathing version of the KonMarie method, haha).
  5. Find the relaxation, the turning inward, the permission inside the slowness.
  6. Next, bring your awareness to the outer layers of your body. The ones closest to the surface, exposed to the air. Next, bring your attention to the layer under that and the layer under that until you get to the core of your body.
  7. Take a moment to appreciate how the outer layers of your body protect the deep warmth of your beating heart. Your body shivers and contracts and does all it can to preserve your inner body temperature. A gift. Appreciate these signs of self-preservation.
  8. Now, slowly open your eyes to the life all around you. Smoke from chimneys, tweets from the hardy winter birds, deciduous greenery, tracks in the snow from romping rabbits. Make note of all the signs of life all around you.
  9. Then, slowly make your way inside, taking the new insights this winter forest bathing practice gave with you.

Journaling challenge: use one page in your journal to doodle the signs of life you noticed. On another page, draw or describe the layers of meaning you noticed in the lively dormancy of winter.

Bonus kid-friendly challenge: gather little remnants of nature in your pockets. Bring them inside and set them up in a nice little nature display. Set out a magnifying glass for further inspection.

 

forest nature display

 

 

{If you enjoyed this exercise, check out our free forest bathing starter guide with three more in-depth forest bathing invitations.}

 

I’d love to hear your thoughts or see your journals. Come on back here and drop a comment about your winter forest bathing experience or drop them in the Forest Bathing Central Facebook Group.

DIY Pine Needle Body Oil

Pine Needle Body Oil

 

At our house, we use an Advent calendar to celebrate the days leading up to Christmas.

One of our Advent activities this year was to make pine needle body oil from our Christmas tree.

This kid-friendly project will likely turn into a yearly tradition in our house.

So, before you throw out your Christmas tree, I’ve got a great easy recipe for you using its needles.

Otherwise, you can use the pine needles from any coniferous tree to make this lovely winter oil.

Gather a basket-full of needles on your next forest bathing outing.

 

Pine needle oil recipe

(Pin me! Here’s a PDF version)

Pine Needle Body Oil

Supplies

  • One clean, lidded glass jar
  • Enough pine, fir, or spruce needles* to fill the jar (ours was a Balsam fir)
  • Mild oil, such as olive or almond oil

*Note: you want to make sure the evergreens you harvest don’t get sprayed!

Directions

  1. Pull the individual pine needles off the branches, place in a fine strainer, rinse, and let dry.
  2. Then, fill your jar within an inch of the top with the pine needles, lightly compressing and muddling the needles with a chopstick or spoon.
  3. Pour oil over the needles until the jar is full or the oil covers an inch above the top of the needles.
  4. Label the jar and place in a cool, dark place for a month, shaking every so often.
  5. After about 30 days, strain the needles from the oil and discard the needles. Bottle the infused oil.
  6. Voila, your very own evergreen body oil!

 

DIY pine needle body oil

 

How to use your pine needle body oil

I like to use evergreen body oil in a number of ways:

Self lymph massage. Just look up “lymph massage techniques” on YouTube and you’ll find plenty to get you started. Did you know your lymph system doesn’t have any sort of “pump” to drain its fluids? Most of the movement happens through movement (exercise), but you can improve drainage with massage. My favorite technique is to rub around my ears, down the back of my neck, and around the front of the neck to the collarbone.

Sore muscle relief. The coolness of evergreen oil feels great on achy muscles while the massage encourages blood flow to the area to help it heal. It smells way better than Bengay too!

Child foot massage. One of my favorite ways to soothe my kids is to give them foot rubs, especially right before bed or after football practice. The cooling effect of the pine oil targets those achy tootsies. There’s just something about a foot massage that guides the kids into a relaxed state of mind and something so sweet about the nurturing process of a foot rub.

Congestion chest rub. Evergreens have great sinus-clearing qualities. You could add a few drops of eucalyptus oil to a palmful of your evergreen oil and rub it across your chest for relief reminiscent of Vick’s.

Partner massage. Evergreen oil has a gender-neutral fragrance that’s perfect for either partner. Back rubs with evergreen oil are a great segue-way into intimacy.

 

Learn more about herbal body oiling here. I refer to Amber’s podcast often about herbal body oiling and love her description of how the absorption of fats nourishes the skin and nervous system. She also sells some really magnificent body oils and remedies (the elderberry elixir saves us every cold and flu season). #notsponsored

 

 

Handmade evergreen oil is a sweet gift for a personal friend or family member.

Otherwise, keep a bottle in your own apothecary.

This effective oil is worthy of the rudimentary or well-practiced herbalist. Almost everyone has access to pine needles and they offer too many healing benefits to ignore.

You can also use the oils to enjoy the benefits of forest bathing in the winter.

I’ve talked before about the tree that keeps on giving, and this is another pure example of that. Another way to utilize the gifts that our precious trees offer us.

Have fun!

 

From my roots to yours,

~Jess

 

P.S. if you make a jar, I’d love to see it! Tag @ForestBathingCentral on Instagram with your concoctions.