This is a public-interest archive. Personal data is pseudonymized and retained under
GDPR Article 89.
RE: [GWL]: garden tool retailers
Another garden tool retailer with good quality garden tools is
www.rittenhouse.ca
We ship anywhere in North America.
Want to order something or have any questions call the cool Consumer
Products Manager. ME!
Bruce
Bruce Zimmerman
abz1@610cktb.com
abz1@canada.com
www.brucezimmerman.com
]At 10:34 PM 8/13/01 +0000, you wrote:
>In the U.S., most gardeners buy most of their tools from chain-store
>garden centers or the garden-center parts of major general retail chain
>stores. This is the way to get the cheapest tools of the most common
>types. Such tools are usually cheap in all respects. They are usually
>made out of inadequate amounts of poor-quality materials, and often are
>poorly designed as well. There is no point to sharpening an $8 shovel
>or spade from the discount house, because the metal is shaped so poorly
>it will take more than $8 worth of time to sharpen and is so inferior it
>won't hold an edge anyway.
>
>For better quality tools of standard types, I go to a locally-owned
>hardware store that has a bench grinder and sharpens all the tools for
>free for the asking before you take them home. If you can find a
>hardware store or garden center that sharpens the tools, they are likely
>to be selling tools worth sharpening. Such tools will usually cost 2 to
>4 times as much as the equivalent junk versions in the chains. Farm
>supply stores and "Feed and Seed" stores usually will carry the better
>brands of tools, also. Farmers tend not to buy junk that doesn't work
>or doesn't last. So farm supply stores are a good source of quality
>versions of the more common garden tools.
>
>For the more specialized tools, most American gardeners will need to buy
>mail order. I believe the best single mail order retail supplier of
>garden tools in the U.S. is Peaceful Valley Farm Supply, in California.
>Peaceful Valley was founded to provide tools and supplies for
>small-scale organic gardeners and farmers.
>
>Many seed companies carry useful and interesting collections of quality
>specialty tools of the kind that you can buy only mail order. I
>consider four, in addition to Peaceful Valley, especially noteworthy. I
>list these 5 companies and their websites below. You can find out all
>you need from their websites. I give an address for Fedco, which is a
>cooperative that does not have a website. Since tools are often
>expensive to ship, when you have a choice of mail order sources, the one
>closest to home is often least expensive.
>
>I've ordered tools from all these companies, and have always been fully
>pleased with what I got. Here, in alphabetical order, are my
>recommended five:
>
>Fedco (Maine) PO Box 520, Waterville, ME 04903-0520
>Johnny's Selected Seeds (Maine) wwwjohnnyseeds.com
>Nichols Garden Nursery (Oregon) www.nicholsgardennursery.com
>Peaceful Valley Farm Supply (California) www.groworganic.com
>Territorial Seed Company (Oregon) www.territorialseed.com
>
>In addition, there are two very interesting mail-order stores that have
>extensive collections of gardening, farming, and traditional "homestead"
>tools. These two companies supply tools to Amish farmers, for example,
>whose religion doesn't allow most kinds of electric tools. Amish people
>buy and use high quality sophisticated hand tools of many kinds. These
>companies have some tools I've never found elsewhere -- corn husker's
>gloves, for example, and hand-cranked corn shellers. You can even get
>grain mills appropriate for a home or big enough for an entire
>community, all the gear for your draft horses, a buggy, or a
>wood-burning cookstove. And, of course, all kinds of traditional hand
>tools for everything from gardening to milking your own cows, churning
>your own butter, and making your own cheese. Here are these two
>companies:
>
>Cumberland General Store (Tennessee) www.cumberlandgeneral.com
>Lehman's (Ohio) www.lehmans.com
>
>Hope this helps.
>
>Carol Deppe
>Author of BREED YOUR OWN VEGETABLE VARIETIES: THE GARDENER'S AND
>FARMER'S GUIDE TO PLANT BREEDING AND SEED SAVING (Chelsea Green, Dec.
>2000) (See table of contents, excerpts, & reviews at
>www.chelseagreen.com.)
============================================================
ARE YOU IN DEBT? Consolidate credit cards without a loan!
Reduce interest and payments! Save Thousands of dollars and
become debt free 70% sooner! Click here for a FREE QUOTE!
http://click.topica.com/caaac15bUrGSSbVSZwBf/debtguru
============================================================
Pass the word to garden writers, editors publishers, horticultural businesses about our list.
==^================================================================
EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?bUrGSS.bVSZwB
Or send an email To: Gardenwriters-unsubscribe@topica.com
This email was sent to: topica.com@spamfodder.com
T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================
Other Mailing lists |
Author Index |
Date Index |
Subject Index |
Thread Index