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» Gardening
Tools
Gardening Tools: Yard Tools
There's no denying that gardening is hard physical work. But it's pleasurable
hard work, made all the easier by good-quality, appropriate gardening tools.
Modern day tools are ergonomically designed to spare backs, shoulders, and wrists.
Your health is very important to keep in mind when gardening.
In
thousands of years of tilling the soil, we have created a great variety of garden
tools to dig, cut scrub, harrow fields, and trim borders. What makes the
tools unique, and collectible, is the way function has dictated form, resulting
in not only ingenious shapes, but artistic ones. In the 19th and early 20th
centuries garden tool catalogs listed hundreds of task-specific tools including
dibbers, mattocks, potato hoes, onion hoes, daisy grubbers, claws, weeders,
forcers, straighteners, garden row markers, garden reels, rakes, watering cans,
water tanks, lawn mowers, lawn rollers, weed whackers, and many many more.
Check out garden global's basic collection of gardening tools
and find out what you may be missing in your garden.
The Garden Spade
A spade is not the same tool as a shovel. A spade is short-handled and has a
flat, squared-off blade. It is ideal for edging beds, digging planting holes,
slicing under sod, and working soil amendments into the garden. In a pinch you
can even use a spade to chop ice on walks. Its versatility makes it a staple
in the gardening tool shed.
The Shovel
One of the most important gardening tools is the Shovel. A garden shovel typically
has a dished (concave) blade that is rounded or mildly tapered at the tip. Most
shovels are long-handled, although you can buy them with short handles, too.
Because the blade is canted at an angle to the handle for greater leverage,
a shovel is ideal for attacking piles of soil, sand, and other materials you
need to load or move within your garden.
The Garden Fork
Dig into the soil with the four straight, sturdy steel tines of a garden fork.
Also known as a spading fork, it's a good tool for turning and aerating the
soil. Use it to break up chunks of soil and to work organic matter, fertilizer,
and other amendments into the soil. A garden fork copes easily with occasional
buried roots or rocks and comes in handy for dividing clumps of perennials.
The Garden Hoe
Cultivate the soil and remove young weeds in a garden bed with a hoe. The simplest
hoe is basically a straight-edged, square blade attached at a right angle to
a long wooden handle. It's useful for chopping clumps of soil and scraping the
soil surface to cut off sprouting weeds. When tilted at an angle, the corner
of the blade traces neat planting furrows in prepared soil. There are many different
types of hoes. A swan hoe has a curved neck. A diamond hoe has a head that is
diamond-shaped, perfect for pulling weeds from between plants.
Steel Rake
Also called a garden rack, this tool features 12 or 14 short steel tines mounted
on a sturdy steel bridge at the end of a long handle. Use a steel rack to dress
and smooth out prepared soil in a planting bed. Its tines simultaneously break
up small clods of soil and corral stones and debris. Use a flathead style to
level the soil for planting. Flip the rake over so its bridge scrapes along
the surface of the soil.
Trowel
The basic hand gardening tool for digging, a trowel is indispensable
for planting bulbs, seedlings, and other small plants in a garden bed. Trowels
are available with sturdy handles and narrow or wide, cupped metal blades with
tapered tips. Different sizes -- widths and lengths -- suit different planting
jobs.
Flexible Rake
The business end of this rake, sometimes called a lawn or leaf rake, is a fan
of flat, flexible tines. Typically bent at their tips, the tines are made of
lengths of metal, bamboo, plastic, or even rubber in a variety of styles. The
tines are attached to a long handle for easy control. Use a flexible rake to
gather light debris that is spread out on beds, lawns, and walks, and to rake
up leaves.
Hand Weeder
This gardening tool is basically a miniature hoe, which most gardeners
use for down-and-dirty weeding. The short handle at the end of a flat, straight-edged
blade allows you to maneuver between plants in a bed. The blade may be square
or triangular and mounted at various angles for flexibility. Position the blade
on the soil and draw it toward you to cut weeds off at -- or just below -- the
soil level. Or turn the blade upward, so its corner digs deeper to dislodge
stones or pry out larger weeds.
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