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Choosing the correct style of garden hoe for each job | Gardening 101 | Gardening Australia



Tino Carnevale explains why there are different styles of garden hoe, and shows which is the best one for each job. Subscribe 🔔 http://ab.co/GA-subscribe

Hoes are one of the oldest tools used in agriculture and are great for shaping and clearing soils, harvesting root crops and weeding.

But with more than 30 different varieties, it’s important to know which hoe is best for the task in hand.

The best time to weed with a hoe is when weeds are small seedlings – by the time they’ve developed a decent taproot you’ll have to get them out with a mini mattock or other digging tool. Hoes are designed to disturb just the top level of soil, where the young roots are growing, allowing you to dislodge the weeds around a row of vegies without disturbing the crop itself.

Loop/Slide Hoes:
A loop or slide hoe is shaped like a stirrup with a hole in the middle and flat base, and is designed to be slid just under the soil, working mostly forwards or away from the gardener. Some have a divot on the end so the head can move slightly, making it work in either a pulling or pushing movement. You can get in close to plants without disturbing them.

Dutch Hoe:
The Dutch hoe has a few different forms – the one Tino is using has a flat, broad, fixed head that is used in a pushing motion. The long handle means no bending and you can reach a wide area. You can slide it under mulch to cut off young weeds.

Swan-necked Hoe:
For chipping Tino recommends a swan-necked hoe, which can be used with a downwards motion to break up soil or chip out larger weeds in the garden. Some of these have flat bases, while others have a pointed base and torpedo hoes have a ‘football’-shaped oval end, so it can be used for detailed work on either side as well as scraping. They’re all great for turning over neglected garden beds.

Hoes for Weeding:
There are hoes with two or three curved tines at the end, which are used for digging out weeds in light soils rather than scraping and are good for weeds that form a rosette.

Due-headed Hoes:
There are also hoes that combine both these styles, with a two-headed end, incorporating a wide blade on one side and forked prongs on the other. Often these come with a short handle for close-up work rather than a long handle that you use standing up.

Maintaining hoes is simple – keep blades sharp and give them a wipe down after use.

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24 Comments

  1. I use my Cyclone chipping hoe for everything, Bunnings here I come with my multitude of Christmas vouchers. Merry Christmas everone, and travel safe if you're on the road. Cheers from North Queensland 👍

  2. I have hoes at home, at work and at my parents house…

    Some say "I've got hoes, in different area codes"🎶

  3. Hoe, hoe, hoe. But really, most small-scale gardeners would only use 1 or maybe 2 hoes at most.
    My tool of choice is the Dutch hoe. Because I'm so comfortable with it I can use it close to my growing plants and chop out weeds easily.
    I have a 3 prong hoe too that hasn't left the shed for a year, not needed, and a chipping hoe I don't think I've ever used.

  4. .. if you choose the right tools for the right job , you can be happily hoeing for a lifetime…said the madam !

  5. nice video, good tips for Gardening work, good job brother,

    greetings from Indonesian farmers

  6. Fantastic info, thank you! I love my stirrup hoe but never realised how best to use the other two, which I do own but have rarely used. Finding out what to use under mulch is great, as this year I've been using grass cuttings as mulch on my veggie patch, which has worked brilliantly for easy 'earthing up' of potatoes, but as I have bindweed too, will now be better able to control it under the cuttings mulch.

  7. Being that I don't have a lot of free time, I prefer to use a cheap hoe as it tends to do as good of a job as an expensive one.
    I tend not to use a Dutch hoe as the language barrier can be a problem.

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