Gardening Supplies

Survival Gardening When There is No Gas, A Vintage “Ro Ho”



“Survival Doc” demonstrates a “Ro Ho,” a vintage gardening tool which he purchased from an estate sale and restored. Vintage gardening and farming equipment which require no gas to operate will come in handy during a survival or disaster situation when there is no available gasoline or a gasoline shortage.

20 Comments

  1. We need to get back to more of a bartering money system and get away from the spell that the federal reserve is producing. We need to grow organic non-gmo foods in our backyards and neighborhoods. We need to quit spending our energy for the military industrial complex to make governments weapons, instead we should use this energy for clean nonflourided water. Secret societies should be banned from all positions of power and authority. Criminals run the world, put them in their jails! -OneLove!

  2. @thenewsurvivalist Hey have you looked into permaculture, food forests, or aquaponics systems? I would love to hear your voice on these topics. Thanks for your awesomeness and keep up the good work! Your friend and happy subscriber -TS

  3. @wakeuptodnwo Yes, deer are vegetarians and so their manure is safe. I would not till fresh dog, cat, human or pig manure directly into my soil Anyway, with such a small amount it probably wouldn't matter that much any way.

  4. Well isn't that tool just nifty! 🙂 We have deer where I live also but with the fence we don't have a issue with them; but we do have issues with rabbits! Last year the rabbits had a hayday on my lettuce and broccoli. This year they will have to find their food else where as I am trying something different.

  5. Nice little tool put Irish soap by the outer edge of garden or dirty shirt deer won't bother garden then

  6. One way to break new ground is to soak with water then cover the area and pile plant material. This how my step mom taught me to do.

  7. That's not quite correct. Only if you are a member of an allotment club you have to follow certain rules and one of them is to have a vegetable garden on a destined percentage of your plot of land. 1/2 is a bit too much, it's rather 1/3. If you own a regular property you don't have to follow this rule of course. What you described is an allotment club and in this case you are right.

  8. Dude, only half your cultivator is there. You are missing the part with the little cultivating teeth so I'm really wondering how you're going to "survive" with a tiller that half of if missing. Better go back and see if they have the rest of it.

  9. Economically speaking, that gardening tool is the best alternative way for farmers. Despite from its uses, it also saves a lot of our money. I will humbly recommend this comprehensive video!

  10. I would get a electric fence charger plug in is around 75$ or you could get a solar powered unit for around 175$ 1 wire set at 8 inches and second one at two and a half to three foot that will keep all critters out of garden

  11. I just found one of the RO HO cultivators with the harrow attachment and the Stirrup hoe.  I put a video out on it.  Thought you might like it

  12. It is called the RO HO garden cultivator and it was made up to the 50s by Rowe Mfg as you stated.  They were very popular during the victory garden era.

  13. It's such a great tool. I wonder why it is so hard to find these tool now. I see no point in the manufacturer to stop producing this nice tool.

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