Gardening is a solitary business, and that’s one of
its charms. For me, a day alone in the yard, digging and weeding, usually cures whatever’s been ailing me. But I’m not really alone out
there. Oh no—some old friends are always with me. Lots of gardeners can tell tales
about their favorite trowels and pruning saws. Here are some of mine, not all of
which started their lives as gardening tools.
This relic is one of my most versatile gardening tools, and
also one of my oldest possessions. It slashes open bags of manure, cuts twine,
slits open seed packets, derails dandelions, and does the work of about a
hundred snootier tools. And because it’s dinged up already, I don’t worry about
abusing it, like calling on it to sharpen a stake when I’m too lazy to go find the
“good” knife. The way it came into my life had an air of divine providence: When I was about ten, I found it while I was out horseback riding one day. It was half-buried on a trail deep in the woods. At that age, I was
obsessed with cowboys and outlaws, and finding this knife—dirty, pitted, and
with a smashed handle that looked like a horse had trampled it—well, I thought
it was the coolest find ever. I still do.
2) The two hand hoes
This yellow one is the latest in a dynasty of cheap paint
buckets that have served as weed bins, compost movers, fish emulsion mixing
bowls, and precarious stepstools. I prefer paint buckets over fancier trugs and pails because they’re sturdy and lightweight, their handles don’t pinch, and they’re quieter than metal pails, which is handy when I’m
out working early in the morning. I’ve never bought a new paint bucket;
I always find them at garage sales for about a buck. I’ve only owned three or
four of these in my life; each one lasts about 10 years. Eventually, they start
to photodegrade and break apart, and the chunks are as sharp as shards of china.
When one finally, well, kicks the bucket, I get a little choked up as I (carefully)
carry the pieces out to the trash can. Then I hit another garage sale.
4) The fancy-schmancy
spading fork
I don’t remember when or where I got these, but it was at
least 20 years ago, and I’m sure I didn’t pay more than about $10 for the set.
But I’ve never wanted another trowel—this one fits me perfectly, is lightweight
and tough, and never rusts, bends, or splinters. And the fork is indispensable;
I’ve dug out acres of burdock and Bermuda grass with that thing. The thin
little transplanter, great for putting in two-inch seedlings, is just icing on
the cake.
6) The homemade soil
sieve
I don’t have a picture of these . . . because they don’t exist. I
use pruning shears constantly—aside from the hand hoes, they’re my most-used
garden tool—but I’ve never found a really good pair. Oh, I’ve had pruners that lasted
for years, but they’ve always been a grumbling compromise: They don’t cut
cleanly, they don’t fit my hand, or they’re awkward and slippery and I keep dropping them on my foot. Right now I have a high-tech pair of Fiskars that
looked like a million bucks hanging on the wall in the store. They have a sweet
spot, which sounds good in theory but drives me nuts: If you don’t cut in just
the right spot on the blade, they just mash whatever you’re trying to cut, and
then you’ve got a fibery mess that you have to saw at two or three times. Their
big selling point is an ergonomic rotating handle thingy that, via some law of
physics, gives you added leverage. The result is that, if you manage to find
the sweet spot, they cut through heavy branches very easily. Too easily—I live
in constant fear of lopping off a finger with those things.