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 Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Weeding Tips and a Tool

by Meg Lynch, Editor

cobrahead.jpgWe had a few colder-than-average, rainy days (over the weekend, naturally) but now the weather is sunny and warm here. We are past the last-expected-frost date in my area, but the nights are still chilly. I'm looking forward to planting annuals out front in a couple weeks. In the meantime I have some seeds to sow out there. I went out today to get the area ready—weed seedlings are popping up everywhere and I wanted to clear them out.

Our "Organic Approach" columnist, Peter Garnham, recommends attacking weeds with a sharp hoe while they are young and still resemble little threads with tiny leaves. At that stage they can't reroot themselves after you simply dislodge them from the soil with your hoe. I followed Peter's advice and went out this morning, when there were plenty of freshly sprouted weeds after the weekend's rain. The earth was still a bit damp, but not soggy—the best conditions for easily pulling bigger weeds' roots up out of the soil.

cobraheadworks.jpgInstead of a hoe, I used a tool that's new to me but popular among some of Horticulture's readers: the Cobrahead. I quickly found out why it has so many fans. The makers describe its sharp head as a "steel fingernail," which is really accurate. You just grip the handle and pick away, as if you are scraping something with your nail. I was surprised at how precisely I could maneuver it. I zeroed right in on weeds big and small and scooped them up by their roots. I just severed the really tiny ones and scratched them back into the soil.

And it seems like the Cobrahead will be a good tool to use when I plant my seeds and seedlings later—it works as a digger, too.

Visit the Cobrahead website


 





5/6/2008 4:51:00 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3] 
5/8/2008 8:51:14 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Although I've never tried the Cobrahead tool, my favorite weeding/everything tool is the Winged Weeder Junior! I have talked this tool up ever since I brought it home from the Chicago Flower Show many years ago. It saves my back and is very efficient around all types of plants and in all kinds of soil. I use it to pull things from the back of my truck, I use it to edge against sidewalks it has never lost its edge.
http://www.wingedweeder.com
5/21/2008 8:12:53 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
Blithewold's volunteers have been using decrepit capecod weeders that are one-by-one losing their handles and edges. I've tried introducing other weeders into the mix but our volunteers are creatures of habit! The Cobrahead looks similar enough to be worth a try and I like that it's made in the U.S.A... Thanks for sharing your endorsement.
7/9/2008 5:22:27 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
I bought a new stirrup hoe this spring. I read about it a book by Eliot Coleman (I think the one about 4-season gardening in Maine); and then I came upon it at the local TrueValue hardware store. It's way better than I expected!

It isn't really made to dig up large established weeds -- I pull those by hand (or ignore them another week, depending) -- but it is superlative in scuffling over smaller bare areas among emerging perennials with new growth of weeds. You use it with a motion similar to vacuuming, back and forth.
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