9 lawn and gardening tools every first home buyer needs in the garage

Buying a house is like playing golf: the learning curve is steep, but you have to start somewhere.
Matt Guilfoil is the head of Desert Canyon Golf Club in Fountain Hills, Arizona, and the co-host of From the Jingweeds, a podcast dedicated to the lawn care industry.
These are the nine lawn and gardening tools he listed, and first-time homebuyers should not try without these tools.
It is said that the ancient Greeks made garden water pipes by opening cows and using their intestines. Nowadays, getting up is more efficient and less disgusting. If your new home does not have an effective irrigation system, you will want one, and it probably won’t.
Remember when you skipped spray when you were a kid? This is your chance to relive that experience. Think of it as a little watering invention that doubles as a fountain of youth for retail purchases.
These nozzle connections are cheap and effective and can be connected to your hose for targeted application of fertilizers and herbicides. The best has a trigger lock handle, which is more convenient to use. Look, one hand!
It is suitable for quickly covering a large amount of ground, and using water, fertilizer, wetting agent, etc. to reach hard-to-reach places.
This seems a bit overkill. But this is the point. When you want to kill weeds and other invaders, you need to pump these things through a separate sprayer, not the sprayer you use when watering or feeding your lawn.
Unlike your garden-style plastic leaf rake, the spring rake has flexible metal tines that provide greater versatility. You can use a spring rake to collect leaves. But it is also very suitable for breaking up thatch, a layer of dead stems, roots and other organic matter that grows on the soil surface. When thatch becomes too thick, it prevents the free passage of water, nutrients and air. It’s time to go to thatch. The problem can be solved by using a spring rake for good rake.
The head of the hula dancer swings back and forth like a hula dancer. The hula hoe is not the sexiest-looking tool, but you will fall in love with it when it comes to weeding. It is particularly suitable for finishing coverings or gravel beds. Just drag it along the ground and the swinging head will do all the work.
Monsters that don’t need aerodynamic force, they will annoy neighbors and pollute the air with exhaust gas. Guilfoil said: “Now they have made great small electric toys.”
Josh Sens is a golf, food and travel writer. He has been a contributor to GOLF magazine since 2004 and now writes for all GOLF platforms. His work was selected as the best sports writing in the United States. He is also the co-author of Sammy Hagar, “Are We Having Fun: A Manual for Cooking and Partying”.

Post time: Dec-02-2021