So, I’ve been gardening for years, right? And like most folks, I started with the usual stuff – trowel, fork, maybe a hoe. They did the job, mostly. But my back started complaining, and some tasks just felt way harder than they needed to be. Cheap tools broke. Better ones still didn’t feel quite right for certain jobs. I got fed up.
Finding Something Different
I started poking around, looking beyond the big hardware stores. First thing I stumbled upon, quite by accident at a little garden fair, was this Japanese tool called a Hori Hori knife. Looked weird, kinda like a cross between a knife and a trowel. Bit heavy. Honestly, I thought, “What am I gonna do with this thing? Stab the weeds?”

But I gave it a shot. Took it home. First time I used it was for planting some bulbs. The pointed tip made digging the right size hole super easy, way faster than my old trowel. Then I hit a tough root – the serrated edge sawed right through it. No switching tools! I started using it for everything:
- Weeding, especially deep taproots.
- Digging in tight spots.
- Dividing perennials.
- Opening bags of compost.
- Measuring planting depth (some have markings).
It just felt solid, versatile. Replaced like three other tools I barely use now. That was a real eye-opener.
Tackling Seed Starting
Next thing was seed starting. Always hated the piles of plastic pots. They crack, they’re messy, and transplanting always seemed to shock the poor little seedlings. I read somewhere about soil blockers. Sounded fiddly. You basically make little compressed blocks of soil to plant seeds in directly.
Bought a cheap blocker online. First try was a disaster. Mud everywhere. Blocks falling apart. I almost gave up. Watched a couple of videos, adjusted my soil mix (needed to be wetter than I thought), and tried again. This time, click! It worked. Made neat little blocks.
The results were amazing. The seedlings grew strong. When it was time to plant them out, there was no pot to remove. You just pop the whole block in the ground. Roots were already “air-pruned” where they hit the edge of the block, so they took off like crazy in the garden bed. Way less transplant shock. Plus, no plastic waste.
Worth Looking Around
So yeah, my shed looks a bit different now. Got my trusty Hori Hori, my soil blockers, a few other odd bits I’ve picked up. It took some trial and error, and yeah, some of the unique stuff isn’t dirt cheap. But finding tools that actually make the work easier, faster, or just solve a nagging problem? Totally worth it for me. Don’t just grab the standard stuff; sometimes the weird-looking tool is the one you didn’t know you needed.