Honestly, I only grabbed that broom shovel thing ’cause I saw it cheap at the hardware store while hunting for a new mop. Looked kinda weird, like someone smushed a broom head onto a dustpan shovel. Figured, “What the heck, worst case it’s junk.”
The First Try Disaster
Got home, garage floor was a mess – wood chips everywhere from my half-arsed shelf project, plus spilled potting soil. Grabbed the new broom shovel thing. Swept a bit with the bristles – felt stiff, awkward. Thought, “This kinda sucks.” Swept a pile together, went to shovel it up… total letdown. The plastic lip wouldn’t lie flat on the floor! Pushed down hard with my foot, stomping that stupid metal lip. Felt flimsy. Half the pile went under it, the other half spilled out the sides trying to lift it. Made more mess than I started with. Almost chunked it right in the trash bin.

Stubborn Second Chance
Couple days later, spilled coffee grounds near the back door. Normally, broom plus dustpan. Saw the weird shovel thing leaning there. Decided to give it one more shot, purely out of spite. Held it differently – gripped the shovel part firmly, pushed the bristle edge flat against the floor instead of trying to angle the whole thing. Started sweeping the grounds directly into the shovel part, kinda using the back of the shovel as a push wall. Well, butter my biscuit. Actually started working! The stiff bristles pushed those damp grounds nicely into the scoop. Didn’t need to lift anything until the shovel was mostly full.
Unexpectedly Useful Places
Got curious. Tried it other places:
- Patio cleanup after the kids tracked in mud clumps. The shovel part caught chunks way better than a regular pan.
- Car floor mats – crumbs and gravel stuck in the grooves? The shovel lip scraped them loose easier than brushing alone.
- That nasty gap behind the washing machine? Jammed the flat shovel head under there, swept out the dust bunnies and a lost sock right into the scoop. Normally need a long brush and a pan. Saved me crawling around.
- Quick shop floor sweep-ups – wood curls, sawdust? Boom. Sweep into the shovel, lift once when full. Didn’t have to juggle two tools.
Started noticing the design makes sense when you let the shovel be the container instead of trying to scrape into something else.
What I Learned
Main thing? Don’t treat it like a normal dustpan where you sweep into a pile first then scoop. That metal lip sucks for that. But if you use the whole thing together, like one solid unit, sweeping debris straight into the shovel cavity as you go, it clicks. It’s surprisingly fast for targeted messes where stuff gets everywhere, especially smaller bits on hard floors. Saved me trips back and forth to the main trash can while doing messy projects.
Still wouldn’t trust it for huge piles of heavy stuff – feels cheap. But for quick jobs, grit on the garage floor, or reaching under stuff? Unexpectedly handy. Paid for itself by not making me drag the huge shop broom out for tiny spills. Almost chucked it, now I gotta admit it lives by the back door.
Makes you think how many things we toss ’cause we use ’em wrong at first. Frustrated me silly that first time, stomping on it like an idiot. Work problem today reminded me of that feeling – tried fixing a report the “approved” way, bombed. Did it my scrappy way later? Boss loved it. Just like learning to sweep into the shovel.