Why I No Longer Need This Tool

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  • čas přidán 16. 05. 2020
  • I have not used this hoe in a long time and it will not be used at the new farm. See how this relates to not having weeds on your farm or in your garden.
    Collinear Hoe - www.johnnyseeds.com/tools-sup...
    Mutineer - www.neversinktools.com/collec...
    Josh's Instagram @josh.sattin - / josh.sattin
    Raleigh City Farm
    Website - raleighcityfarm.org/
    Instagram @raleighcityfarm - / raleighcityfarm
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Komentáře • 92

  • @lurklingX
    @lurklingX Před rokem +5

    "take care of the weeds before you have any weeds" brilliant. love this.

  • @alexcordero6672
    @alexcordero6672 Před 8 měsíci +4

    that's a nice tool when you have soft soil. The weeding hoe is essential on weeds with packed hard dirt (not soil).

  • @anniecorbin7998
    @anniecorbin7998 Před 4 lety +32

    I'm an old lady, so I'm not hitting on you. I want to tell you that you have the best laugh/smile. The info in the video was good, but the out takes were the best part.

  • @shopken1
    @shopken1 Před dnem

    One advantage the stirrup hoe has over the collinear for me, is that you can see where the ends of the hoe are in the soil. I can drop the hoe and actually move at walking speed while dragging the hoe behind me, up and down the sections of the rows. I never need more than my fingertips to do this as the weight of the cutter actually applies all the downward pressure needed. The sides of the hoe can be brought up to the sides of the crop foliage as a visual guide, without accidentally cutting off the plants like I accidentally do with the collinear hoe when using this fast method. I add very long and thin handles to my hoes, and plan on making one that I can angle the hoe for rapid cultivating center rows without adjusting the angles of my arms to keep the hoe over the cultivating area.

  • @nathanmartin9560
    @nathanmartin9560 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Man that dirt/bed is gorgeous

  • @TheOrenbarak
    @TheOrenbarak Před 4 lety +10

    That cute ladybug on your shirt stole the show :)

  • @PastoralHomesteadOutdoors
    @PastoralHomesteadOutdoors Před 4 lety +11

    I started a community market garden on our church grounds this spring in part because of your wonderfully insightful videos. Although we are dealing with Bermuda grass (the demon weed), we are striving to have rows as straight and as pretty as yours. Thank you for the videos and God Bless you and your family!

  • @Nocare89
    @Nocare89 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I let weeds cover crop my garden over winter. I got lots of lovely flowers this spring. The only weed I have issues with is grass. It ruins soil and overtakes every plant. Clover can be bad for seedlings but is easier to deal with than grass and its good for the ground and bees.

  • @toolmantrl
    @toolmantrl Před 4 lety +4

    You had me when you said, "Weed when you don't have any weeds.". 🤔? Oh ok. He's for real. 🤯. The lights are on now. 💡 Thank you Mr. Sattin. 😀

  • @oui-nonmaybe2127
    @oui-nonmaybe2127 Před 4 lety +2

    Lookin awesome Big guy! Awesome demo. Stay Well ! Thank you for taking the time to show and tell so well. 👍💖

  • @avlracing_993
    @avlracing_993 Před 4 lety

    Hey!!!! That made my day Josh! Thank you for the shout out! I hope the tool works amazing for you and all the help at Raleigh City Farm! Thank you for all your support on farming and gardening

  • @davidgerardgeraghty9890
    @davidgerardgeraghty9890 Před 4 lety +3

    Great video Josh, always impressed by your beds.

  • @JNYC-gb1pp
    @JNYC-gb1pp Před 4 lety +8

    Those rows are straight AF!
    Someone has OCD! ;)
    But thats a great tip about disrupting them before they even grow! Gonna try it on my garden.

    • @c3mac55
      @c3mac55 Před 4 lety

      Try a gridder, so quick and easy though there is a learning curve!

  • @thesavagekiwi3492
    @thesavagekiwi3492 Před 4 lety +1

    We are still learning but only really use three weeding tools now. A home made wire tool(s) on a long bamboo handle, and a flame weeder / gas torch, and traps. Much easier than where we were 2 years ago.

  • @Distinctions
    @Distinctions Před 2 lety +1

    wind and airborne seeds in my area still bring weed seeds into my walkways. I covered the ground with landscaping fabric to prevent them from growing

  • @johnnylamuelo2102
    @johnnylamuelo2102 Před 4 lety

    Hey Josh I would agree with you when it comes to when to weed. The most important question to ask before you deal with weeds is "how much should I farm"? I like what Connor from Neversink says "if you have weeds your farming too much" Great videos thanks for sharing your journey.

  • @legalyzeit
    @legalyzeit Před 2 měsíci

    We use the "single tine cultivator" tool from Hoss. very similar in application and precision. great video i may give these tools a try sometime

  • @bonilla2022
    @bonilla2022 Před 4 lety

    NICE!!! I was mistakenly under the impression that if I disturbed the soil unnecessary that it would encourage weeds and or mold... I'm in the Sarasota, Venice zone. THANKS!!

  • @tabithan2978
    @tabithan2978 Před 23 dny

    Those scuffle hoes or stirrup hoes are the best for clearing weeds from gravel driveway or any gravel area.

  • @HonestOpenPermaculture

    Awesome video! Thank you for this. I have weeds but I'm not tarping. So I know my next buy. Hi Gene. 👋👋

  • @kellsbellls
    @kellsbellls Před rokem

    That's so smart! Weeding before there are weeds!

  • @thejimb76
    @thejimb76 Před 4 lety +13

    “Weeding when there aren’t any weeds.” Inspired. Weeding a 50’ row in 5 minutes, standing up instead of hours on your knees.

    • @notsure7874
      @notsure7874 Před 3 lety

      This is game changing. I'm in a SUPER high weed pressure area, so if I want to really stay on top of them I've got to do some weeding every day. Usually inspect and pluck, sometimes the stirrup hoe worked kinda like he's doing with the collinear - but that only works if the bed is no more than 2 rows of plants wide. I probably spend over an hour / month on my beds, and I have like 25% of the bed space he does, and it requires some bending over or being on knees. Incredible!

  • @davenpjp10
    @davenpjp10 Před 4 lety +2

    Great video. We only use our stirrup hoe in our walk ways to get any remaining Bermuda.
    Have you done a cost analysis of how much it costs to put wood chips in each row and the start up labor it costs to do the lasagna method? It is definitely a great way to go, we just don’t know if we have enough labor time in the down months to do it.

  • @patdyer9989
    @patdyer9989 Před 2 lety

    Love your video ! And, the little ladybug on your shirt seems to love you as well.

  • @ximono
    @ximono Před měsícem

    I've seen people use the oscillating/swivel/stirrup hoe very softly right under the surface, you don't have to push it into the soil when using it. But the colinear and wire hoes do seem easier to use if all you have is soft compost tilth.

  • @emcbabe
    @emcbabe Před rokem

    great video, thanks! I have limited hand strength and scoliosis-related lower back and scapular problems. Looks like the stirrup hoe won't work for me, but it would work for someone to help me with initial clearing, and then I could keep it up with the co-linear hoe. I want to do pretty simple tasks, like clear a strip of grass in which to plant plants that need support, near a fence. Weed whacking doesn't take out weeds!

  • @westlakefarms
    @westlakefarms Před 4 lety

    Love the outtakes :-)

  • @travisdykstra3790
    @travisdykstra3790 Před 4 lety

    Josh, thanks for the great videos. About how much compost did it take for you guys to get this set up? Thanks

  • @rizebalikcisi
    @rizebalikcisi Před rokem +1

    Haven't find any in my country so instead of buying overseas via amazon I'll have it made from local blacksmith will see how it will come out 😄

  • @Thoughmuchistaken
    @Thoughmuchistaken Před 4 lety +1

    Weeding before there are any weeds is the absolute best practice. But wanting to have a weed free farm does make me feel sick as I think of my neighbours who all plant 1000s of acres and they likewise don't want any weeds even next door or down the road from their properties. Whether it's my garden plot, or my 100 acre farm, weeds are managed, but they are also welcome and allowed. Native ecology can't live on wall to wall produce and entirely curated hedgerows. Great content as always Josh.

  • @herobands1
    @herobands1 Před 4 lety

    Cool was that a ladybug that landed on your shirt, toward that beginning of the video? Your outtakes made me laugh, Have an awesome day.

  • @jennawaddingham37
    @jennawaddingham37 Před rokem

    I don’t like the rakes is not my first time gardening but this helps! Also have much sycamore seeds so. That’s good to know!

  • @raymondsmith4686
    @raymondsmith4686 Před 3 lety

    Josh, love your videos but I have a question. The tilfer (not sure about spelling) is basically a 1" tiller I think. Why not use a tiller set at 1"? I have a small tiller already.

  • @alexanderamos6586
    @alexanderamos6586 Před 4 lety +2

    The 6 “P’s”
    Proper Planning Prevents Piss Poor Performance
    Nice vid.

    • @notsure7874
      @notsure7874 Před 3 lety

      Nah man, it's Proper Planting Provides Prime Perennial Plants - isn't it?

  • @cordovanbee
    @cordovanbee Před 27 dny

    Awesome! Thanks

  • @notsure7874
    @notsure7874 Před 3 lety

    So - I might have given you one way to save a good bit of time - but DAMN! I was looking at collinear hoes, but the way you use it is game changing. I've got 675 linear feet of bed (15 25 foot rows, and 300lf along the perimeter fence - I counted after commenting about your weed torch guy :D ) - and this is going to save me a TON of time! Judging by your drone shots, you've got something like 3000lf of just beds - plus hedge rows, plus 2 greenouses so when you said 1 hr / month my spidey senses tingled!
    I LOVE Neversink Farms. I didn't know he sold tools! I'm going right NOW to go look at those wire hoes. They look a little more task specific than the collinear, but I might get one of those too (or instead of the collinear).

  • @teddyboy252
    @teddyboy252 Před rokem +1

    Good job

  • @ajsstudiosinc
    @ajsstudiosinc Před 4 lety

    im starting to get it about tarping to eliminate weeds. ill be doing that on my expansion. only problem is my purchased compost came with what appears to be some kind of grass seed. so im constantly pulling these tiny weeds. i gather thats not supposed to happen.

  • @mikelucas3746
    @mikelucas3746 Před 4 lety

    I can only dream of your beds. I don't think I start with the same tilth but I can certainly tell you my seeds grow very slowly and the weeds grow very fast. It is hard to know whether you are taking out the crops in the early stages and by then I have weeds which break off when you try to remove them A row of carrots usually results in a dozen actual plants.
    I tried to put bigger stuff like tomatoes in holes burnt into weed mat which seemed to do the trick. However during the night foxes came and destroyed most of the plants. One fifty foot bed they decided was an adventure playground and ran up and down trampling everything in sight. The only intact bed is protected by aluminium hoops covered in weed cloth and chicken wire. Naturally doing this everywhere will be very time consuming and expensive and I am not confident that it would hold out after seeing what they have destroyed in the past.

  • @deltafour1212
    @deltafour1212 Před 3 lety +1

    New at this. So the Oscillating Hoe is for clearing the area of weeds and grass you plan on having a garden. Then use a different hoe once your garden is established to rid of weeds and cultivate?

  • @bleedblue769
    @bleedblue769 Před 9 měsíci +1

    have you ever had any problems with mulching with wood chips? supposedly it takes nitrogen out soil so im afraid to mulch my paths

  • @Adam.Rushing
    @Adam.Rushing Před 2 lety

    Just found you guys, and binging now...SUBBED! :)
    We live in Alaska, the land of the midnight sun...so weeding is honestly an every-other-day chore during the days when the sun does not set. It has always been a LOT of work...until now I'm betting! Thank you so much for all this information!
    QUESTION FOR YOU: At 1:51 you mentioned using a silage tarp and then you said you build some sort of beds - it sounded like "lasagna". What in the world are you referring to there??!! What is a silage tarp, and what is a "lasagna bed" - if I heard you correctly.

  • @_nativexred_
    @_nativexred_ Před 4 lety

    .....that's what's up !! dig the skinny 🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @johnrosier1686
    @johnrosier1686 Před 7 měsíci

    That tool might still be useful for terminating a cover crop. It looks a lot sturdier than the one that I have. I am on board with weeding way before things get bad.

  • @adrianr8968
    @adrianr8968 Před 2 lety

    Great video- what do you think of the BGT-Basic garden Tool, would love your opinion of it, Thanks

  • @lisaf7688
    @lisaf7688 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you! 👍

  • @nathanwooldridge85
    @nathanwooldridge85 Před 4 lety +1

    You're right, "Weeding when there aren't any weeds". Seems as if you are just continually disturbing the very thin surface of the soil to disrupt any seed germination rather than weeding. As you also said, because you tarped and then flamed any stubborn weeds there are no pre-rooted weeds left that would necessitate the stirrup hoe.
    Here in Australia everyone (backyard environment, not farm) has to mulch with pea straw/sugarcane because the the sun just bakes the soil and forms a crust. I wonder if the continual disruption around the plants could alleviate the need to mulch. it would suppress any weeds, like mulch does, and I imagine it would stop the crust forming which makes the soil hydrophobic....it would reduce water evaporation though....mmmm

  • @travisbumgardner4556
    @travisbumgardner4556 Před 4 lety

    How do you get rid of Bermuda grass aka wire grass initially? Does tarping first kill it?

  • @jrtj3998
    @jrtj3998 Před 2 lety

    Thanks!

  • @VinceEspositoJr
    @VinceEspositoJr Před 4 lety

    I'm really trying to get my head around the no till thing, probably like many gardeners/small farmers. I don't like what plastic does to the soil, and I'm surrounded by hay fields. I think the more I cultivate like you demonstrated the more hospitable the soil is for weed seed. Any advice on how to begin this journey in my environment?

    • @CABaker
      @CABaker Před 2 lety

      You may want to try tarping temporarily with silage tarps to let the weeds germinate and then the tarp kills them when they can't get light. But it does have to be a certain kind of tarp that let's 0 light through and keeps it wet and humid underneath.

  • @sn232
    @sn232 Před rokem

    What type of mulch do you have around your plants? Thank you

  • @kevincrowe1483
    @kevincrowe1483 Před rokem

    It would have been nice to see the collinear tool your talking about.

  • @seattleareatom
    @seattleareatom Před rokem

    Dr. Elaine says if you have weeds your Soil Food Web isn't correct. LOL Back in the dark ages of the 1980s on an organic farm we used old fashioned metal vacuum cleaner tubes with a blade secured to one end. Nice thing was the tubes clipped together to extend length for tall people. Plus the blade could butt right up against most plants and do no harm.

  • @DuyNguyen-lo2mm
    @DuyNguyen-lo2mm Před 3 lety

    how do you keep wood chip from getting into your planting bed?

  • @rossr277
    @rossr277 Před 11 měsíci

    Hoave you heard about the ducs plow? What do you think of them?

  • @UtopiaOliveOrchard
    @UtopiaOliveOrchard Před 4 lety

    Impressive

  • @yahlov
    @yahlov Před 4 lety

    i wish my farm would be weedfree but it overgrows me every year and i dont know what to do :(
    also the 70 hp traktor with mulchmower i lend doesnt get rid off all.

  • @philsla
    @philsla Před 4 lety +1

    So I understand tarping to kill the surface weeds. What about all the random weed seeds in the soil? Don't they sprout as soon as you remove the tarp? What about random grass/weed seeds in the compost?

  • @Plantedbytheriver
    @Plantedbytheriver Před 4 lety

    What are you using to take out your out your salad mixes in a bed flip then?

  • @aperson1181
    @aperson1181 Před 4 lety

    I didn't catch, how do you control weeds?

  • @Writerdust
    @Writerdust Před 4 lety +1

    I got lost on the cardboard part where you said you then put the wood chips on it? Was this cardboard in the walkway part? And did you put a tarp over that entire area in the video? Do you have another video that you have made that shows this?

    • @willypelly85
      @willypelly85 Před 4 lety +2

      Yes, he's made a couple videos talking about bed prep and showing his lasagna a method. Maybe about a month ago, if you check his recent videos.

    • @Writerdust
      @Writerdust Před 4 lety

      WhatchaPell23 Thanks I will do that!

  • @420WILD
    @420WILD Před rokem

    4:38 is that really enough to prevent weeds from taking root and growing?

  • @girliedog
    @girliedog Před 4 lety +1

    Perfect that you have a ladybug crawling around on your chest.

  • @oolala53
    @oolala53 Před 2 měsíci

    At about 1:55, you said something about how you avoid weeds before you start. I couldn’t understand you. Your topsoil looks very loose!!Are you saying you stir up the soil with the weeder when there is nothing showing? How often?

  • @kevinlee315
    @kevinlee315 Před 3 měsíci

    Where did you buy your tools

  • @c3mac55
    @c3mac55 Před 4 lety

    Get the offset 4x2 head.

  • @cordovanbee
    @cordovanbee Před 27 dny

    Subbed

  • @jklxyx3629
    @jklxyx3629 Před 4 lety +6

    I usually just use my Stirrup hoe how you were using the other hoe. But a person has to cultivate after every rain and at least once a week. keep it up doing great by the way I got about 2 Acres planted of produce I'm a breaking into the small scale Market producer.

    • @scottbaruth6386
      @scottbaruth6386 Před 4 lety

      I use the stirrup hoe like that too, and yes after every rain or it gets away quick. The tarps would be good except I'm a one guy farm with lots of wind, so I'm not sure I could do very big ones. I'd like to see that wire hoe in action too, especially around onions.

    • @CABaker
      @CABaker Před 2 lety

      Yeah, rather than buy another hoe like the one he uses, I can just use the stirrup hoe for that as well.

  • @bernardpalir
    @bernardpalir Před rokem

    Made in Slovenia❤ the best

  • @kevinaldridge1080
    @kevinaldridge1080 Před 4 lety

    I Walk the garden everyday to WATER, check the PLANTS, AND Cultivate.
    .

  • @thechaosgardener
    @thechaosgardener Před 3 lety

    Lots of visible soil. Anywhere I see soil I see solar energy not being harvested by plants. I like to broadcast legumes and edibles so all soil has a living root

  • @JimBruce1962
    @JimBruce1962 Před 11 měsíci +1

    It would have been better to show the tools working up close instead of a wide shot of you talking but otherwise it was ok.

  • @AfzaalWardag
    @AfzaalWardag Před 3 lety +1

    I will stick with my stirrup/scuffle/action hoes
    But thank for crop bedding idea
    I like your setup will follow you in future Insha Allah.

    • @brucehalleran1149
      @brucehalleran1149 Před 10 měsíci

      Here in northern Pennsylvania we grow rocks in clay soil. I'm with you. That loamy sand he is working looks easy, but I wouldn't know.

  • @wildedibles819
    @wildedibles819 Před 4 lety

    Ya my 3 claw weeders work better broken i can see how these tools would work great

  • @w.e.s.
    @w.e.s. Před 11 měsíci

    Unless ur doing gardening for a living ull always use a stirrup. The gardens in ur backyard will never be this easy and nice and if they r u should start doing it for a livin

  • @toadranger50
    @toadranger50 Před 2 lety

    You should give yours to me then. I’ll pay the shipping.