The Accidental Smallholder Forum
Smallholding => Equipment => Topic started by: Odin on May 10, 2012, 05:53:43 pm
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Have purchased a Lazy Dog dock weed removal tool and have been using it ( can do little else in this weather ). Quite impressed with the tool, lifted a lot of dockers in a short space of time and have tipped them in to a wooden crate to hot compost.
A right tool made in Gods own County, Yorkshire. ;)
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So what do they look like, as I need to find OH some jobs and that sounds right up his street. ;D
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Put Lazy Dog in to Google and it will come up. The chap who designed it is called Philip, has a farm with Soil Association Organic Standard and designed this tool for RIP (Removal of Individual Plants) without the use of chemicals. It is a stainless steel lattice frame with interchangeble heads and a double handle. With your foot press the fork under the dock root, lever the tool back and lift the whole thing up and put the docker into a bucket, all WITHOUT BENDING ONES BACK!
There is a lot of informative instruction about weed control on both his web site and with the tool. I would highly recommend one to anybody with an area of land to control.
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I've had a look at the website and can't really see the difference between the lazy dog and the fork I've already got.
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I've had a look at the website and can't really see the difference between the lazy dog and the fork I've already got.
Quite!
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My wife bought a Fiskars weeding tool which goes over the weed, grips the roots and then levers them out. As advertised on TV it does actually work, but you need to be careful with it. The jaws are stainless steel but the rest is plastic and having read the literature very carefully, expecting it to come with the usual Fiskars 10 year guarantee, I find it doesn't have any guarantee specified.
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There is a lot of difference from using a fork, it works a lot easier, quicker and is not going to break. I have had a serious problems with dockers and dandy lions and digging them out, I have ended up using a large screw driver because I have snapped everything else. Now found a tool that works and is manufactured from proper material, not foreign monkey metal and plastic. Will now confidently get in front of the weed problem.
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Hi Odin,
We have a dock problem up here. How does the tool do on gravelled areas ?
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Not tried it on gravel ? However, the tool comes with 2 inter-changable heads that are both narrow; one is a 3 prong fork, the other is more of a hoe with a slot, I reckon it would work.
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Cheers Odin!
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http://www.kk.org/cooltools/archives/003620.php (http://www.kk.org/cooltools/archives/003620.php)
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Bye gum, I've lifted some dockers out with this tool, in fact it is becoming an obsession and should come with an health warning, its a bit like a computer game. Sometimes I start on the smallest of dock leaf and out comes an enormous root system that looks so evil, if it had teeth it would bite my arm off ! I try to limit my self to a half hour but often go an hour and a half. Don't tell that Robert Waddell chap but sometimes I can feel a blister coming on and he might think I'm soft, so I have to stop, also my tea is on so I don't want to be late for our lass, (she wears the trousers when I'm not in ::) )
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wish this site had a 'like' button! :thumbsup: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: . Looked at these but bought a cheaper 'Granpas weeder' in the end. Similar design but smaller and more suited to lawns than fields methinks - does emerging thistles a treat but not all docks.. I will have me a lazy dog one day.