Thank you for the safety tip about wearing safety glasses. I got a metal shard in my eye once and the eye dr had to use a special drill tipped with a fluffy material ti lift it out of my eye. He said im going to use a drill on your eye, I said no you're not! Haha he did
I always look for old vintage garden tools first as I think they are better made and if they where going to break they would have broken years ago. Plus they are pretty cheap to, just recently I bought a very heavy duty rake for £2, add a little elbow grease and a fresh coat of paint it will last for years and years of use
In Denmark we have a saying that "Det rette værktøj er det halve arbejde" which roughly translates into "The right tool is job half done". After renovating a 122 year old house and maintaining a 500m2 vegetable garden i can confirm that quality tools are a VERY good investment. And dont buy the smartest newest tool, they are often build out of plastic or something like that and cant be fixed when broken, i always buy wooden handle/shaft tools with steel or cast iron heads, they last for decades, and if you find your old rake in a forgotten corner of the garden after three years in scandinavian climate; some sandpaper and some oil and its as new.
Try to make Russian garden fork. The fork have a frame welded along the upper edge perpendicular to the plane of the teeth. So you don’t have to squat low to loosen the soil.
Protect your tools so you will enjoy them for a lifetime, but don't worry about putting the nice quality wooden handle naked into the abrasive metal jaws of the bench vice!! Sorry, but I had to say.
Very useful introduction to the main/basic tools needed to get going. Thank you for not padding this out too long or into separate videos.
Thank you! I'm new to gardening and this video really helped me understand what to buy and how to use them. BTW, I love your safety glasses!
Thank you for the safety tip about wearing safety glasses. I got a metal shard in my eye once and the eye dr had to use a special drill tipped with a fluffy material ti lift it out of my eye. He said im going to use a drill on your eye, I said no you're not! Haha he did
Good JOB
Really informative, great information and clear and concise. Thank you very much, truly appreciated.
Excellent!!!!!
I always look for old vintage garden tools first as I think they are better made and if they where going to break they would have broken years ago. Plus they are pretty cheap to, just recently I bought a very heavy duty rake for £2, add a little elbow grease and a fresh coat of paint it will last for years and years of use
This is the best gardening tool video on utube.
youtube*
SofiaSupreme Gaming RUclips*
@@jaren3972 :/
Thank you good
So nice
Good information !
In Denmark we have a saying that "Det rette værktøj er det halve arbejde" which roughly translates into "The right tool is job half done".
After renovating a 122 year old house and maintaining a 500m2 vegetable garden i can confirm that quality tools are a VERY good investment.
And dont buy the smartest newest tool, they are often build out of plastic or something like that and cant be fixed when broken, i always buy wooden handle/shaft tools with steel or cast iron heads, they last for decades, and if you find your old rake in a forgotten corner of the garden after three years in scandinavian climate; some sandpaper and some oil and its as new.
For cleaning rust off tools: vinegar.
@@gigel99324 Great tip, thanks!
@@bmbpdk not sure it matters, I've used grape/wine vinegar (9°) with great success. Using sandpaper removes more than needed :(
Try to make Russian garden fork. The fork have a frame welded along the upper edge perpendicular to the plane of the teeth. So you don’t have to squat low to loosen the soil.
Would you ever be willing to try out the hoedag garden tools to see if they can fit in with your tool lineup?
Thanks Interested 👏👏👏💖
Can u plz explain which oil u used to remove the dust from the tool
I think he said Linseed oil?
@@shadowcrash333 thanks a lot..
No scythe was mentioned... But it's my recommendation
Like a sickle?
@@manalacethan3850 yes, but longer. so you aren't stooping down and hurting your bak
They guy too clean
If anyone wants to volunteer to till my 75x150 foot garden with a spud fork raise your hand......
A shovel for gardeners, which, I think, you have not seen. See the links below the video - ruclips.net/video/kmnjEOthrlE/видео.html
dandeleons yes but,a weed is an unwanted plant,so any plant that disturbs the successful growth of the plants that you have sown are weeds.
dandelions are not weeds. they're great food. highly nutritious
How would YOU use them?? Salad? Doesn't sound very savoury. Do you cook them or what?
@@Sionnach1601 salad. It's gotta peppery flavor. Can replace arugula.
@@franzb69 I even seen someone made dandelion jelly out of them lol also dandelion wine O_o
Dandelion is a weed. But a lot of weeds can be used for medicinal purposes.
tractor disc, lol
VINCE TO HAHAHA
Protect your tools so you will enjoy them for a lifetime, but don't worry about putting the nice quality wooden handle naked into the abrasive metal jaws of the bench vice!!
Sorry, but I had to say.
Why do we need. To choose the right tools in farming?
Answer:.....................................................,....
hello grade 8
It’s good to buy quality tools but there are a lot of overpriced tools out there.
Harbor Freight is a decent compromise I believe
Good job
dandeleons yes but,a weed is an unwanted plant,so any plant that disturbs the successful growth of the plants that you have sown are weeds.
dandeleons yes but,a weed is an unwanted plant,so any plant that disturbs the successful growth of the plants that you have sown are weeds.
dandeleons yes but,a weed is an unwanted plant,so any plant that disturbs the successful growth of the plants that you have sown are weeds.