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Old 07-07-2006, 05:51 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
JW
 
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Default Heavy watering cans are inefficient and bad for your back

Ken,

Just a thought & a few questions,

Why use a heavy watering can surely your using a light one?

Ohh you mean when you fill it with water
Make sure its a good brand, (I recomend Hawes) or at least well
balanced. Minimum weight then, if you can't deal with it, infvest in a
drip feed watering system or some porus hosing that will distribute the
water to the roots.

However we look forward to seeing your invention at an affordable price,
in garden centres soon!

Oh & if you've got a bad back & are anywhere near North London, I can
recommend an excellent physio.
J

wrote:

When you've got lots of closely planted thriving plants with thick
foliage and flowers, it can be pretty slow, hard and careful work
bending and gently pushing through the "jungle canopy" to see the
small patch of soil around the base of the plant where you actually
need to direct the stream of water from your watering can - rather
than wasting it on the leaves, which can't absorb it anyway. Even
when the water reaches the soil, you wonder how much is going to
evaporate, and whether it's reaching the root system of your particular
plant.

What's needed is a portable reservoir (preferably carried on the back)
connected to a long rigid tube attachment tipped with a pointed metal
nozzle. You would simply penetrate the soil around the plant with
the tip and squeeze a spray trigger to inject a standard amount of
water directly into the soil. The tube would push through the foliage
and you could do a lot of plants quickly without having to bend down
all the time to see what you were doing.

It sounds so obvious but I haven't seen anything like this. Does
anyone know if a gadget like this is available?


Ken Cohen



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