Take care though, I bought one from a G/C a few years back. I bent it out of shape the first time I used it.
I'd second that opinion.
I also bought one that was very similar to the one being advertised on Amazon. The product was very flimsly, and broke almost immeditately.
If you simply want to make a small hole, in well-tilled earth, then the product will probably work OK. But if you're planting into well-tilled earth, do you really need a borer. Why not just use a trowel.
I was trying to bore into hard clay, for which purpose a tool is needed, and so the result was not surprising. But the product simply didn't do what I wanted. It was completely useless for my purposes.
I didn't actually see GW last Friday, so didn't see what tool Monty actually used. I suspect it was a far more expensive and well-constructed tool than the one being talking about.
I seem to recall that MD's a fan of Dutch garden tools, so I suggest you google Sneeboer or De Wit, both do wooden handled bulb planters, not cheap though!
You could write to the manufacturer, and say you were writing a review of bulb planters for the Gardeners World website (which you are doing, in effect). You could say you'd heard poor reports of other manufacturers', and would they like to send you a sample of theirs, so you could try it out.
We broke on, but the second was okay. It would have come from a garden centre.
It dug really neat holes in the lawn, perfect for larger bulbs. I remember bending down all the time anyway to crumble the soil back in. I noticed Monty just popped the whole plug back in. Bulb foliage must be made of stronger stuff than I allowed for!
For clusters of smaller bulbs it was quicker to lift a flap of lawn up & tuck them all under, as they can have closer spacing & less depth.
Where the soil is looser in a flower bed & a lot of bulbs are going in, I find staying down & using a trowel much quicker.
Did anyone notice.monty actually used two different types of bulb planters, one had a bigger bore. For me gardening should not break the bank it's all natural!
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I'd second that opinion.
I also bought one that was very similar to the one being advertised on Amazon. The product was very flimsly, and broke almost immeditately.
If you simply want to make a small hole, in well-tilled earth, then the product will probably work OK. But if you're planting into well-tilled earth, do you really need a borer. Why not just use a trowel.
I was trying to bore into hard clay, for which purpose a tool is needed, and so the result was not surprising. But the product simply didn't do what I wanted. It was completely useless for my purposes.
I didn't actually see GW last Friday, so didn't see what tool Monty actually used. I suspect it was a far more expensive and well-constructed tool than the one being talking about.
I might add that I bought mine from a 'respectable' garden centre (Wyevale), who were trying to sell it along with their collections of Spring bulbs.
Figrat you are right Sneeboer do one and it is almost £60. Ah how lovely to have the paypacket of the BBC!
Not necessarily.
You could write to the manufacturer, and say you were writing a review of bulb planters for the Gardeners World website (which you are doing, in effect). You could say you'd heard poor reports of other manufacturers', and would they like to send you a sample of theirs, so you could try it out.
Would it be at all suspicious if we all wrote?
I would like one though.
Thanks all, Gary I like to think I'll write but know I won't! I might write to Monty though!
This one is nice and traditional looking although it only has one foot peg whereas I think the one Monty used (sighs...) had two!
http://www.crocus.co.uk/product/_/de-wit-tulip-bulb-planter/classid.2000009242/
We broke on, but the second was okay. It would have come from a garden centre.
It dug really neat holes in the lawn, perfect for larger bulbs. I remember bending down all the time anyway to crumble the soil back in. I noticed Monty just popped the whole plug back in. Bulb foliage must be made of stronger stuff than I allowed for!
For clusters of smaller bulbs it was quicker to lift a flap of lawn up & tuck them all under, as they can have closer spacing & less depth.
Where the soil is looser in a flower bed & a lot of bulbs are going in, I find staying down & using a trowel much quicker.