
❄️ How to Shovel Snow Without Wrecking Your Back
When snow hits Kentucky, most people think about icy roads and school delays. At Back to Life Chiropractic, we think about something else entirely: back injuries from shoveling snow.
Snow shoveling is one of the most common winter activities that leads to low back pain, disc injuries, and muscle strains—especially when posture breaks down. The good news? The same posture principles we teach our patients every day can protect your spine during snow season.
🧠 Good Posture Works. Poor Posture Hurts.
This is a core principle we teach every patient during their Good Posture Visit.
Whether you’re sitting, standing, walking, or shoveling snow, your spine functions best when it maintains its three natural curves—in the neck, mid-back, and low back.
Poor posture flattens or exaggerates these curves, which places extra stress on the discs, muscles, and ligaments.
🏋️ The Safest Way to Shovel Snow: Stick Your Butt Out & Squat
When lifting snow, do NOT bend from the waist or round your back.
Instead, we teach patients to:
- Stick your butt out by pushing your hips backward
- Squat using your legs, not your lower back
- Keep your chest up and spine in good posture
This movement pattern:
- Maintains your three spinal curves
- Takes pressure off the discs
- Reduces strain on muscles and ligaments
- Protects your lower back from injury
Rounding your back or bending from the waist dramatically increases stress on the spine—especially in cold, tight muscles.
🧍♂️ Use the Wall Test Before You Shovel
Before heading outside, take 30 seconds to check your posture using the Wall Test we teach in our office:
- Head, shoulders, butt, and ankles against the wall
- Eyes level
- A small natural gap in the low back
This is your posture blueprint. Shovel while moving from this posture.
❄️ Shovel Smart
- Take smaller scoops
- Keep the shovel close to your body
- Turn with your feet—do not twist
- Push snow when possible instead of lifting
🧊 Ice Your Back After Shoveling (and Before Bed)
Even if your back feels “okay,” shoveling can create inflammation.
We recommend icing:
- After shoveling
- Before going to bed
Apply ice for 20-25 minutes to reduce inflammation and stiffness.
At Back to Life Chiropractic, we offer cloth clay ice packs that:
- Mold comfortably to the spine
- Stay cold longer
- Are reusable and easy to use at home
These are the same ice packs we recommend to our patients for safe, effective icing.
🩺 Chiropractic Care During Snow Season
Regular chiropractic care helps:
- Maintain spinal mobility
- Improve posture awareness
- Reduce stress on joints and discs
- Support safer movement during daily activities
📍 Back Pain After Shoveling Snow?
If your back feels sore, stiff, or “off” after shoveling, don’t ignore it.
Early care can prevent a small problem from becoming a big one.
Back to Life Chiropractic
4201 W Hwy 146, LaGrange, KY 40031
www.backtolifechiropracticky.com
Good Posture Works. Poor Posture Hurts.
Even in the snow.