A Farm Toolbox: a Dutch hoe

It may sound like the start to a naughty joke, but my life really did improve when I brought home that Dutch hoe.

It has a six-foot-long ash handle extended with an eight-inch steel shank, and a half-moon hoe on the end. It has an elegant form and is effective when working through soils with good tilth. I can weed the garden for an hour without straining my back.

A half-moon Dutch hoe

A half-moon Dutch hoe

 

The traditional style American hoe requires a rigorous up and down chopping that wears out the lower back and arms. Definitely useful with heavier soils. But for a garden where the soil has been improved with amendments and is easily worked, the half-moon hoe is a dream. The extra-length handle allows my 6-2 frame to stand upright. The cutting blade is angled so that with a motion like sweeping a broom I can cut through the soil and weeds.

The Dutch hoe is made by DeWit in Holland, and I purchased mine at a farmer’s conference a decade back in Chattanooga. A quick rub of linseed oil to the handle every few months and a quick sharpening after each use and this hoe should easily outlast me and my back.

I have a variety of hoes to choose from depending on the task at hand. The half-moon is the only one that is a pleasure to use.

My beautiful hoe.

A Farm Toolbox: the pocket knife

 

Pocket knives

Pocket knives

Of all the items in our farm toolbox my pocket knife gets the most use. Just this morning it has been used to cut the twine off of a round bale of hay, sharpen a pencil and cut umbilical tape for sutures for a ewe’s prolapsed uterus. And it is not even noon.

Now one can’t claim that a pocket knife is solely the domain of farmers. But a knife, kept in good condition is in constant use. I’m frequently surprised by how many men and women do not carry a pocket knife. Even off the farm it seems someone is always looking for or needing a knife. It has been my habit since a child to always have a good quality pocket knife. For most of my teenage years it was a Buck knife with three blades. The steel of the blade was and still is hard to sharpen. I don’t know enough of metallurgy to know the why.

Regardless, that Buck knife is practically indestructible. I lost it in the pig paddock about ten years ago while we were castrating piglets. There it wintered and summered for a few years before another pig turned it up out of the muck. The rust was easily scoured off of the stainless steel. And it is still functional and still hard to sharpen.

My go to knife has a four-inch folding blade made by Le Theirs, a beautiful French pocket knife with a boxwood handle. The blade is honed on both sides and easily holds a sharp edge. The French seem to have a real knack for functional and beautiful pocketknives.

Cindy carries a small three blade “Yellow Jacket” made by Camillus. It was made in the last year before they moved production from the US to China. And I carry a beautiful small Yukon model with a bone handle made by Tennessee’s knifesmith Colonel Littleton on nicer occasions.

Form, function and beauty, that seems to be a common element of our farm toolbox. Most of the commonly used tools, with some exceptions, have all three elements in either their design or use. Like the person whose beauty is not apparent on first meeting, a good tool sometime reveals its beauty through prolonged use and acquaintance.