Showing posts with label best garden tools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best garden tools. Show all posts

Thursday, January 13, 2011

How to Pick the Best Garden Tools?


Ask any gardener worth their salt if they have their own particular favourites when it comes to garden tools, and the answer will almost always be a resounding yes.

For some, the tool in question might be a very well-used shovel or spade, its metal tip rounded and razor-sharp from long years of regular use. For others, it's a favourite hoe, a special hand-trowel, a much-loved rake or a weeding implement that they've owned forever and would now hate to be without.

These are the special tools with which the gardener has formed an affectionate bond, the dependable ones that go straight into the wheelbarrow at the beginning of a hard day's gardening, to be used again and again. And then there are the rest of them...

The "rest of them" are the tools found hidden at the back of most garden sheds, festooned with cobwebs, coated in a layer of rust, their handles cracked and their blades broken. They're the tools that never really did what they were supposed to do: the secateurs so blunt that it would barely cut so much as a blade of grass, the garden fork so flimsy that it crumpled on contact with the first large stone, the spade so short-handled that only a child could use it without getting an aching back.

Bought long ago, on impulse or in a sale, they are now heartily despised. Bitter experience and hard effort has taught their owners that there's nothing like bad gardening tools to turn the already-arduous tasks of weeding, digging, hoeing, raking and pruning into a series of hair-pullingly tedious, tantrum-inducing chores (having a hissy fit about a broken spade/fork/shovel/hoe while ankle-deep in mud is, as some will know, a peculiarly dispiriting, undignified, experience).
Now do you know how to pick the best garden tools thus to grow you garden perfectly?

* Original post: The Garden of Eden for Gardeners (Garden Tools World)

Monday, April 13, 2009

Great Garden Tidying Tools --- Garden Power Spike with Timer

Garden Power Spike with Timer (2 outdoor sockets)


Specification:

Measurement: 22x43cm high & measures 27 cm from ground when installed.

Quality standard: BS/IP44 approved.

Features:

- 2 outdoor sockets with safety flaps and automatic timer.
- Stake into the ground wherever you need power in your garden.
- Timer uses a 24 hour clock, and can be set at intervals of 15 minutes.
- Ideal for fountains, garden power tools, sprinklers and irrigation systems, lighting etc.
- Must be used in conjunction with a residual current device (RCD).

- Comes complete with a 5m cable and molded plug.

* The above recommended garden tool: Great Garden Tidying Tools --- Garden Power Spike with Timer is just advertising for sale online and supplied by Greenfingers Ltd. (a company aimed to provide you with a range of content and shopping opportunities that will help you achieve inspiration in your garden... ), if you interested in this Great Garden Tidying Tools --- Garden Power Spike with Timer and want more shopping details about it, you may visit the mentioned online shopping site of garden tools freely.

** Original address of this garden tools post: Garden Tools World

Sunday, March 15, 2009

New Designed Garden Tools --- Four-Wheeled Hose Truck


New Designed Garden Tools --- Four-Wheeled Hose Truck
Specification:

1. Snap-On Handle, Only Minor Assembly Required
2. Holds up to 300 feet of hose.
3. All steel with an anti-rust finish.
4. Guaranteed forever!

The new designed 4 wheeled Hose Truck has all the same heavy duty features as the original design with added value and quick assembly. Simply attach the bolt-on wheels, reel crank, and snap-on frame handle. The compact size reduces freight costs and the smaller footprint makes this unit easy to handle.

* The above recommended piece of
garden tools: New Designed Garden Tools --- Four-Wheeled Hose Truck is sold online now on Yard Butler Store, if you interested in this New Designed Garden Tools --- Four-Wheeled Hose Truck or have any questions on it, you may visit the mentioned garden tools online store freely.


** Original address of this garden tools post:
Garden Tools World

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Guide Tips for Family to Grow Flowers in Winter II

3. Watering
 
Live plants that been transplanted at the beginning of the year are needn’t to be watering, unless the soil is very dry.

Plants been transplanted in spring and summer days which are still not survived fully, if the weather has no rain for a long time, which should be watered through spraying its tree crowns about every ten days.

Flowers, grass or shrubs transplanted in days of later autumn and former winter, whose watering should been paid more attention to, give them a watering once a week thus to ensure their successful survival.

Evergreen flowers and shrubs grow in the garden, could be given a spray watering to their crowns around midday in sunny days, so as to clean its dusts adhered to their leaves, and give them a better condition of photosynthesis.


4. Fertilization

Ground grow flowers and shrubs which had been trimmed, such as camellia, chimonanthus, jasminum nudiflorum, fuchsia, magnolia, purple magnolia, rose, lagerstroemia indica, redbud, begonia, edgeworthia chrysantha, sweet-scented osmanthus, banana shrub and so on, around their roots you could dig a external circular groove with a depth more than 15 centimeter, and lay in some composite fertilizer or fertilizer cakes, which to meet their demand of growing in the next year.



Camellia


As for flowers and shrubs which been transplanted newly in days of later autumn and early winter, any forms of fertilization are unsuitable and should be stopped.

As to ground grow flowers and plants grow in north areas, such as carnation, hollyhock, collard, Verbena, Phlox, daisies, Calendula officinalis, pansy and so on, you can continue to nourish them with low-concentrated liquid fertilizer.


Carnation



5. Pest Prevention and Control

For flowers and shrubs whose trunk diameters reach to 2-3cm or above, you could prepare white pigments yourself and whitewash their trunks, thus to reduce the incidence of pests in the coming year.

For plants with exposed trunks partly, you could also prepare or buy lime sulfur mixture (ESA) to daub their trunks, thus to prevent rotting or worm eaten on their wood parts. Before daubing, you should check their trunks, barks and roots, and cleaning up egg masses or insect pupaes once found.

For those deadwoods, defoliates and weeds grow in the garden, which should be cleaned up together and be burned.

(not finished to continue…)




* Original address of this garden tools post: The Garden of Eden for Gardeners

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

New Garden Tools --- Black & Decker Powered Auto Clamp

New Garden Tools --- Black & Decker Powered Auto Clamp


Brand: Black & Decker

Model: AC100

Price for sale online: $34.99

Specification:

- 6" opening
- 350 lbs. clamping force
- Quick release lever for quick and easy screw adjustment
- Can also be used as a manual clamp
- Soft feet to protect your work surface
- 60 clamps on one set of batteries


Accessories:

1/2 in. Dr Sockets
1 in. Insert Bits
2 in. - 6in. Power BIts
3/4 in. Dr Socket
3/8 in. Dr Sockets
.Abrasive Cutting Blades

* The above recommended piece of garden tools: New Garden Tools -- Black & Decker Powered Auto Clamp is now sale online and supplied by Ace Hardware Corporation, if you interested in this Black & Decker Powered Auto Clamp, you may contact the mentioned online garden tools shop freely.

** Original address of this garden tools post: Garden Tools World