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Dogger 24-03-2004 05:51 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 
My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?



shazzbat 24-03-2004 05:51 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 

"Dogger" wrote in message
...
My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?


I'm still getting their sales leaflets after entering the comp. to win one a
couple of years ago in one of the gardening mags. Those comps.IMHO are just
a trawl for increasing junkmail databases.

Steve




Andy H 24-03-2004 05:52 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 
Lightweight, I prefer a more powerful machine, my Merry Tiller does a far
better job & much faster


"Dogger" wrote in message
...
My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?





James Fidell 24-03-2004 05:52 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 
In article , Dogger wrote:

My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?


I know a couple of people who have one and think they're great, but
their ground is already fairly well cultivated. The veggie garden
I'm working on at the moment on the other hand, which has been pretty
much ignored for perhaps as much as ten years, was almost completely
untouched by quite a heavy duty rotorvator, so the mantis would
certainly have been pointless.

James

Frogleg 24-03-2004 05:53 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 
On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 22:16:07 +0000, Dogger wrote:

My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?


I had one years ago. It did a *good* job of cultivating fairly hard
soil, 'though I didn't try it on tarmac. :-) It was very sturdy and
uuintimidated by rocks of up to 3" diameter. It was a perfect *bear*
to start, although some methods and incantations were recently posted
on rec.gardens. One advantage was its portability -- it was small and
light enough to throw in the back of my car. Its path isn't wide --
8-10", so most suitable for tilling small areas. I've never heard of
anyone getting rid of a Mantis because it broke down. Mostly it's
frustration with the starting and need for a larger machine.

Christopher Norton 24-03-2004 05:54 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 
The message
from James Fidell contains these words:

In article , Dogger wrote:


My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?


I know a couple of people who have one and think they're great, but
their ground is already fairly well cultivated. The veggie garden
I'm working on at the moment on the other hand, which has been pretty
much ignored for perhaps as much as ten years, was almost completely
untouched by quite a heavy duty rotorvator, so the mantis would
certainly have been pointless.


James


This one`s been dug over once so it should be a little bit better. Must
admit I`d rather have a big brute for the big work but the Mantis looks
useful for preparing seed beds and weeding.

The OP could of course hire a big one for the times he needs a big un.

shazzbat 24-03-2004 05:55 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 

"Dogger" wrote in message
...
My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?


I'm still getting their sales leaflets after entering the comp. to win one a
couple of years ago in one of the gardening mags. Those comps.IMHO are just
a trawl for increasing junkmail databases.

Steve




Frogleg 24-03-2004 05:56 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 
On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 22:16:07 +0000, Dogger wrote:

My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?


I had one years ago. It did a *good* job of cultivating fairly hard
soil, 'though I didn't try it on tarmac. :-) It was very sturdy and
uuintimidated by rocks of up to 3" diameter. It was a perfect *bear*
to start, although some methods and incantations were recently posted
on rec.gardens. One advantage was its portability -- it was small and
light enough to throw in the back of my car. Its path isn't wide --
8-10", so most suitable for tilling small areas. I've never heard of
anyone getting rid of a Mantis because it broke down. Mostly it's
frustration with the starting and need for a larger machine.

Mervyn Thomas 24-03-2004 05:57 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 
I've had one for a year and its very usefull for "culltivating" already dug
soil. Goes right in the boot and very transportable. Never had a problem
starting! Well recommended as a tool not a digger!


"Frogleg" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 22:16:07 +0000, Dogger wrote:

My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?


I had one years ago. It did a *good* job of cultivating fairly hard
soil, 'though I didn't try it on tarmac. :-) It was very sturdy and
uuintimidated by rocks of up to 3" diameter. It was a perfect *bear*
to start, although some methods and incantations were recently posted
on rec.gardens. One advantage was its portability -- it was small and
light enough to throw in the back of my car. Its path isn't wide --
8-10", so most suitable for tilling small areas. I've never heard of
anyone getting rid of a Mantis because it broke down. Mostly it's
frustration with the starting and need for a larger machine.




shazzbat 24-03-2004 05:57 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 

"shazzbat" wrote in message
...

"Dogger" wrote in message
...
My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?


I'm still getting their sales leaflets after entering the comp. to win one

a
couple of years ago in one of the gardening mags. Those comps.IMHO are

just
a trawl for increasing junkmail databases.

Steve


And we got garden news today, and guess what? there's an opportunity to win
one. Why not enter, see what happens........


Steve.
Again.



Christopher Norton 24-03-2004 05:58 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 
The message
from James Fidell contains these words:

In article , Dogger wrote:


My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?


I know a couple of people who have one and think they're great, but
their ground is already fairly well cultivated. The veggie garden
I'm working on at the moment on the other hand, which has been pretty
much ignored for perhaps as much as ten years, was almost completely
untouched by quite a heavy duty rotorvator, so the mantis would
certainly have been pointless.


James


This one`s been dug over once so it should be a little bit better. Must
admit I`d rather have a big brute for the big work but the Mantis looks
useful for preparing seed beds and weeding.

The OP could of course hire a big one for the times he needs a big un.

Mervyn Thomas 24-03-2004 05:59 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 
I've had one for a year and its very usefull for "culltivating" already dug
soil. Goes right in the boot and very transportable. Never had a problem
starting! Well recommended as a tool not a digger!


"Frogleg" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 22:16:07 +0000, Dogger wrote:

My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?


I had one years ago. It did a *good* job of cultivating fairly hard
soil, 'though I didn't try it on tarmac. :-) It was very sturdy and
uuintimidated by rocks of up to 3" diameter. It was a perfect *bear*
to start, although some methods and incantations were recently posted
on rec.gardens. One advantage was its portability -- it was small and
light enough to throw in the back of my car. Its path isn't wide --
8-10", so most suitable for tilling small areas. I've never heard of
anyone getting rid of a Mantis because it broke down. Mostly it's
frustration with the starting and need for a larger machine.




shazzbat 24-03-2004 05:59 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 

"shazzbat" wrote in message
...

"Dogger" wrote in message
...
My allotment hasn't been used for about five years. I dug it over last
year and it was like digging over the Gatwick runway.

I was thinking of getting one of those mantis cultivatiors. Any one
got a view on them?


I'm still getting their sales leaflets after entering the comp. to win one

a
couple of years ago in one of the gardening mags. Those comps.IMHO are

just
a trawl for increasing junkmail databases.

Steve


And we got garden news today, and guess what? there's an opportunity to win
one. Why not enter, see what happens........


Steve.
Again.



Dogger 24-03-2004 09:13 PM

Mantis Cultivator Tiller
 
On Wed, 24 Mar 2004 16:48:58 -0000, "Mervyn Thomas"
wrote:

I've had one for a year and its very usefull for "culltivating" already dug
soil. Goes right in the boot and very transportable. Never had a problem
starting! Well recommended as a tool not a digger!


thanks all I may splash out the £300 as they want £40 per day to hire
one round here.

I have dog most of it now but even in stuff I did in October needs
another dig or two to break it down...

I will let you know how I get on.


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