In which we speak of gardening, tools, propane, homesteading...and such like.
Showing posts with label garden digging tools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garden digging tools. Show all posts
Monday, May 2, 2016
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Digging rocks out of the garden with an unbreakable boradfork
Here in the Blue Ridge Mountains it's not uncommon to find rocks while digging in our heavy clay garden soil. (Did you ever wonder why there are always more rocks in the garden every year?)
We're sure glad to have an unbreakable broadfork.
You can get one too, at www.WayCoolTools.com
Using a broadfork will loosen the soil deeper than a roto-tiller and not leave hard-pan.
At 60" tall this garden digging tool keeps you in an upright position and gives you the leverage for the 10" tines loosen the soil.
There are three sizes to choose from: 5, 6 or 7 tines that will cultivate up to a 30" wide garden bed in one pass.
Buy a broadfork today.
Friday, February 21, 2014
Dig your 2014 garden without a rototiller!
So you've made your best garden plant seed picks and actually placed your order on time this year.
You will need to contact the rental shop to get on their list of rotor-tiller renters and hope that the weather cooperates and that there are no problems with their tillers that will necessitate a repair on your tilling day.
Of all the things you will need to do to get ready for a successful gardening season, preparing the soil for planting is an unavoidable must do task.
If you are like most people, using a rotor-tiller is as pleasurable as hiking on a superhighway.
An alternative to the noise, smell and mechanical stress of rotor-tilling is using a broad fork.
- Otherwise known as a broadfork (written as one word) a U-bar or a grelinette.
Not all broad forks are created equal and each has their own place in the world of gardening tools.
One broadfork you will want to check out when learning about broad fork gardening is the WayCoolTools broad fork. It is surprisingly light despite being made entirely of tempered aircraft quality alloy steel, yet strong enough to remove large stones and penetrate heavy, compacted soil. It has the added benefit of enabling you to more finely cultivate your garden soil for planting by chopping and tilthing the soil.
To use a broad fork rock the two handles back and forth while applying pressure with one or both feet on the cross bar above the digging blades.
As you penetrate the soil, pull back on the handles to loosen the soil.
If needed you can use the broad fork with an up and down chopping motion to break up larger clods of soil.
The amount of time to produce finished planting beds is around a minute per foot in heavily compacted soil. With that in mind you could dig a 30 foot long planting bed in about a half hour.
If you were to work an hour a day with our 5 tine broad fork, in the course of a work week you will have made ready over 200 square feet of gardening space.
Did you know that you can actually dig deeper than a rototiller with a broadfork without creating the hard pan that rotor-tillers cause?
For more information on these broad forks see www.waycooltools.com
You will need to contact the rental shop to get on their list of rotor-tiller renters and hope that the weather cooperates and that there are no problems with their tillers that will necessitate a repair on your tilling day.
Of all the things you will need to do to get ready for a successful gardening season, preparing the soil for planting is an unavoidable must do task.
If you are like most people, using a rotor-tiller is as pleasurable as hiking on a superhighway.
An alternative to the noise, smell and mechanical stress of rotor-tilling is using a broad fork.
- Otherwise known as a broadfork (written as one word) a U-bar or a grelinette.
Not all broad forks are created equal and each has their own place in the world of gardening tools.
One broadfork you will want to check out when learning about broad fork gardening is the WayCoolTools broad fork. It is surprisingly light despite being made entirely of tempered aircraft quality alloy steel, yet strong enough to remove large stones and penetrate heavy, compacted soil. It has the added benefit of enabling you to more finely cultivate your garden soil for planting by chopping and tilthing the soil.
To use a broad fork rock the two handles back and forth while applying pressure with one or both feet on the cross bar above the digging blades.
As you penetrate the soil, pull back on the handles to loosen the soil.
If needed you can use the broad fork with an up and down chopping motion to break up larger clods of soil.
The amount of time to produce finished planting beds is around a minute per foot in heavily compacted soil. With that in mind you could dig a 30 foot long planting bed in about a half hour.
If you were to work an hour a day with our 5 tine broad fork, in the course of a work week you will have made ready over 200 square feet of gardening space.
Did you know that you can actually dig deeper than a rototiller with a broadfork without creating the hard pan that rotor-tillers cause?
For more information on these broad forks see www.waycooltools.com
Friday, April 12, 2013
Planting potatos and onions using the broad fork
The garden soil has finally dried out enough to prepare some beds for the potatoes and onions due to some particularly hot early spring weather. While digging with the six tine broad, I was really struck by the fact that I never really got to that exhausted state we have all encountered when doing the really hard work of preparing the garden for planting.
Working at a comfortable pace we prepared two beds 30 inches wide by 26 feet long in about an hour and a half. The spacing between the beds in this section of the garden was made intentionally wide this year to allow for the potato vines to spread out into the path while giving our young children enough room to play comfortably without damaging the plants; so much,. You know dump trucks - excavators?
Working at a comfortable pace we prepared two beds 30 inches wide by 26 feet long in about an hour and a half. The spacing between the beds in this section of the garden was made intentionally wide this year to allow for the potato vines to spread out into the path while giving our young children enough room to play comfortably without damaging the plants; so much,. You know dump trucks - excavators?
Monday, March 11, 2013
Dig smarter, not harder with a lighter unbreakable broadfork!
Broad fork defined – a U shaped garden fork with two tall handles attached to a crossbar from which extends a row of long tines designed
to deep cultivate the soil while enabling you to dig faster and more
efficiently without back breaking stress and fatigue.
One of the major obstacles to fully enjoying the art and
science of gardening is the grueling, exhausting work of digging and preparing
the soil properly for your plants. Especially if you happen to live in an area
with heavy clay, stones, or roots in the soil, or if you don’t happen to be a
very strong and athletic person.
The truth is, it’s probably not you, but your tools that are lacking in ability!
Digging using a traditional garden spade or fork involves
quite a bit of energy and force, mostly coming from the shoulders and back
while bending over and lifting and turning the soil. This can get tiring
quickly and you will be feeling it the next day! The broadfork allows you to
use your body with a rocking motion to push the fork into the ground while
standing up straight. Once the tines are in the soil you simply pull back on
the handles a little to aerate the soil, or more to lift the soil up, remove
stones and till without disturbing soil structure. You have become the human
powered engine to this mighty effective garden tiller! All without ear numbing
noise, smelly exhaust or expensive fossil fuels.
While using a broad fork in your garden you will discover
that the synonym for broad fork might well be "speed fork". Because
of its width, you will cover more ground in less time and with less effort with
a broad fork than with a conventional garden fork or spade.
Along with the inherent ease of use and speed a broadfork
offers is the fact that the structure of your garden soil remains intact as you
are not turning the soil like you would with a shovel or mechanical tiller.
(happy earthworms and soil microbes!)
How is this broad fork better than other broad forks?
Our broad fork is made in America
with all U.S.
sourced steel, hand crafted and specially heat treated for added strength and
durability. Heat treating provides for a tool that is remarkably strong and
lighter weight. The shape and strength of the digging tines enable you to
penetrate even heavier clay soils without concern over bending or breaking the
tines.
The wedge shape tines coupled with the light weight design (significantly lighter than comparable broadforks)
enable you to use this broad fork to chop up large clods of clay more easily
and quickly than other broadforks, or even a shovel.
The light weight aircraft quality tubular steel handles will
not crack or break and there is no chance of getting a splinter. These strong
unbreakable handles aid in the ability to dig up even large stones out of the
soil with out the worry over bending or breaking your broad fork.
A broad fork is a very useful tool for lawn aeration and loosening the soil around fruit trees and ornamental trees and shrubs.
(Now you can free-cycle those spiky shoes.)
They are also great for starting new garden beds, working in soil amendments and freshening up beds in between crops.
The original 7 tine 27” wide unbreakable broad fork weighing
16.5 lbs. featuring 10” long tines with 4.5” tine spacing and 24" spacing
between the handles was introduced in 2012. It is capable of preparing a 30”
wide garden bed in one pass. 30” wide vegetable beds have become the standard
in many organic gardens and small local produce farms thanks to popular authors
like John Jeavons (How to Grow More Vegetables) and Eliot Coleman (Four Season Harvest); both are gardening and farming innovators
and are advocates of the use of a broad fork.
Our original large broad fork design was intended for small
market farmers and large scale gardeners to use instead of a traditional garden
fork, shovel or roto-tiller to prepare their garden soil. We were hearing from
some who had broken other broadforks and needed a much sturdier tool that will
stand up to hard service in heavy clay soil.
As we talked with more home gardeners we heard requests for smaller sized forks with the same strength and capabilities as the original design while being a little lighter and easier to maneuver.
In response, for spring 2013 we are introducing two new
broad fork sizes.
Now available are a 6 tine 22.5” wide broad fork weighing
14.5 lbs. capable of producing 26” wide planting bed and a 5 tine 18” broad
fork weighing 14 lbs. capable of producing a 22” wide planting bed.
Both of the smaller broad forks feature a 23” cross bar with
19.5” spacing between the handles. Like the larger original sized broad fork
the strong 10” steel tines are spaced 4.5” apart and do a beautiful job of
loosening the soil and breaking up larger clumps of soil into smaller easier to
work with particles.
Each of the three broad forks is 60” tall.
These new smaller broad forks appeal to gardeners who prefer a smaller sized, lighter weight broad fork for more mobility and ease of use with the same strength and durability of our original unbreakable broad fork.
Available exclusively at www.WayCoolTools.com
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