Choosing the right
Heirloom / Open Pollinated Vegetable Garden Tools
Very few tools are necessary for a small Heirloom / Open Pollinated Vegetable Garden.
It is better to buy a few simple, high-grade garden
tools that will serve well for many years than garden
equipment that is poorly designed or made of
cheap or low-grade materials that will not last.
In most instances, the only tools needed are a
spade or spading fork, a steel bow rake, a 7-
inch common hoe, a strong cord for laying off
rows, a wheelbarrow, and a garden hose long
enough to water all parts of the Heirloom / Open Pollinated vegetable garden. A
trowel can be useful in transplanting, but it is
not essential. If the soil is properly prepared, Heirloom / Open Pollinated vegetable garden plants can be set more easily with the hands
alone than with a trowel.
For Heirloom / Open Pollinated vegetable gardens that are from 2,000 to 4,000
square feet, a wheel hoe is very useful because
it can be used for most work usually done with
a common hoe and with much less effort. The
single-wheel type is probably the easiest to
handle and best for use as an all-purpose wheel
hoe. Other styles are available and may be used
if preferred.
The cultivating tools, or attachments, for the
wheel hoe should include one or more of the so called
hoe blades. They are best for weeding and
are used more than the cultivator teeth or
small plow usually supplied with a wheel hoe.
For Heirloom / Open Pollinated Vegetable Gardens over 4,000 square feet, a rotary
garden tiller is useful in preparing the soil for
planting and controlling weeds.
Many Heirloom / Open Pollinated Vegetable Gardeners who do little or no farming
have the choice of hiring equipment for garden land
preparation or buying their own. Equipment
for hire too often is unavailable when
needed, so that a favorable season for planting
may be missed. Country vegetable gardeners, in increasing
numbers, are turning to small farm and
garden tractors for land preparation, cultivation,
lawn mowing, and hauling sprayers in
gardens and orchards. Those who garden every
year and who have large homesteads usually
find this equipment a good investment. The size
and type of equipment needed depend on the
amount of work to be done, the contour of the
land, and the character of the soil. For cultivating
and other light work a 20 to 30 horsepower
tractor is used. If plowing or other heavy work
is involved, a larger tractor is desirable. Modern
outfits of this size are well adapted to cultivating
small areas. A medium-size tractor suitable
for cultivating a large Heirloom / Open Pollinated vegetable garden can also be
used for plowing.
The rotary tiller, which is capable of preparing
light to medium soils for planting in one
operation, has been widely adopted by vegetable gardeners
who have such soils. In the hands of a careful
operator and on land that is not too hard
and heavy and is reasonably free from stones,
roots, and other obstructions, this machine has
many desirable features. It can be adjusted to
cultivate very shallowly or to plow the soil and
fit it for planting. Tools such as sweeps may be
attached, thereby adapting the machine to
straddle-row cultivating.
Use of well-adapted implements in preparing vegetable
garden land greatly lessens the work required
in cultivating. Clean, sharp, high-grade tools
greatly lessen garden labor. For larger Heirloom / Open Pollinated vegetable gardens,
a wheel-type hand fertilizer distributor, a
sprayer or duster (preferably a wheelbarrow type
power sprayer), and a seed drill are generally
profitable. Minor tools include two
pointed iron stakes and weeders.
If sufficient water is available, irrigation
equipment is necessary in many areas and
highly desirable in nearly all Heirloom / Open Pollinated vegetable gardens. Furrow
application requires careful planning and laying
out of the garden area and precise handling
of the soil to insure even distribution of water.
Overhead pipes with nozzles at short intervals,
temporary lines of lightweight pipe with rotating
sprinklers, and porous hose laid along the
rows are extensively used. The most common
practice is to use a length or two of garden
hose, with or without sprinklers, fed by faucets
on temporary or permanent lines of pipe
through the vegetable garden.
In winter, when there is little heat from the
sun, little water is used by garden plants so irrigation
is not needed in most areas. However, in summer,
rainfall is usually inadequate and irrigation
is essential for maximum production.