I need to buy my first hoe for my allotment. I am currently clearing it of grass and short weeds. It is clay soil and a bit boggy too. The array is confusing me. What do people advise Hoe wise to help with clearing it please?
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Which Hoe should I get?
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It's tricky. Everyone seems to have a different opinion. Personally I haven't found one I really like yet but I use a Dutch Hoe more than anything else. I'm on the lookout for a Swoe, looks like it might be good, but I haven't found one locally yet.
I suggest you pick one that takes your fancy and see how you get on with it. Or better still, ask fellow allotmenteers if you can borrow theirs for a few minutes?
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Whatever feels comfortable to use. I bought a new one and don't like it. Still using my Grannies one, they don't make them like that anymore!Gardening requires a lot of water - most of it in the form of perspiration. Lou Erickson, critic and poet
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There are two main types:
The draw or swan-neck hoe:
can be used to chop into weeds that are well established, and used to draw earth up - for example earthing up potatoes.
The Dutch hoe:
For me the angle-of-attack is critical. For example Dutch hoes like this:
have such a "flat" angle that they are hard work to use as you can't just slide them back and forwards. I've seen lots of cheap ones like this, the metal bends easily, and doesnt' look easy to sharpen - the metal coated in some sort of Hammarite-looking paint
Dutch hoes, and their variants, only work well in soil that is friable and on weeds that are not too established. Little and often definitely the best approach.
I think a steel one, which can easily be sharpened (with a stone) is best as if the tool si properly sharp it slices through the weeds more easily.
A stirrup hoe is a variation on the Dutch Hoe - push back and forth to chop the weeds
K's Garden blog the story of the creation of our garden
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and a Swoe (which is what I use) is also a variation on the same theme:
the main feature being that its offset head means you can work it the other side of a plant so that you can weed all around a plant - without actually having to walk around the far side to get close to the plant itself. Again, angle of attack is important but I have never seen a cheap Swoe and as a consequence perhaps??! all the ones I've seen look fit for the jobK's Garden blog the story of the creation of our garden
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I have two which I use. A variation of the Dutch hoe given to me by my neighbour and a swoe (£2 something brand Fiskars new from JTF In case your interested Kristen). Both are comfy to use, I'm only starting to use the swoe and the ability to go in three different directions without moving is handy.
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I've found this to be a great piece of kit:
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Originally posted by Greenleaves View PostI am looking for a narrow bladed hoe, find standard ones are about 6" but would like one about 3", any ideas?
Or you could make one from a paint scraper - I have some stainless steel ones - that are very versatile - I use them for frying eggs.................but I digress
Seriously, are onion hoes narrow enough?
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Originally posted by Greenleaves View PostI am looking for a narrow bladed hoe, find standard ones are about 6" but would like one about 3", any ideas?
I knew someone who was asked if he had a 2" hoe someone could borrow. He popped into his shed with an old hoe and used an angle grinder on it
New all singing all dancing blog - Jasons Jungle
�I have not failed 1,000 times. I have successfully discovered 1,000 ways to NOT make a light bulb."
― Thomas A. Edison
�Negative results are just what I want. They�re just as valuable to me as positive results. I can never find the thing that does the job best until I find the ones that don�t.�
― Thomas A. Edison
- I must be a Nutter,VC says so -
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my personal fav is the wolf garten hoe on a long wooden handle for large areas by just drawing it backwards it has the perfect angle and a swoe for more fiddle areas
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