Ringweeder Review
My Ringweeder arrived through the post the other day from
Vincent Suozzi in America and it wasn’t long before it was adorning my index
finger. The Ringweeder is a simple device invented by Vincent and resembles a
two pronged fork that fits like a ring onto your finger to help weeding in
small, awkward spaces and I have been eager to give it a test run after since
seeing in on the Kickstarter website earlier last year. The Kickstarter
project, gives members of the public the ability to invest in new innovations
such as this and raised the funding to perfect the design and start production.
The finished piece is a single, high quality plastic tool which
looks to have no weak spots so common in a lot of gardening tools.
Vincent has spent a lot of time perfecting his new tool and
his idea has come a long way since he first fastened a large nail to a steel
ring. The Ringweeder comes in two sizes
to suit most hands.
The Test
Finding an area of weeds in my garden to test the device
wasn’t difficult! Having the Ringweeder
on my finger was comfortable and it wasn’t long before I was getting stuck in
removing even long tap roots. It made me realise that for years I have weeded
with my index finger intuitively and worn holes in hundreds of pairs of gloves
as well as getting frustrated at not getting the weeds up effectively when I
stick my finger into the hard ground.
The Ringweeder really
works. I used it for a good half an hour and it made working in awkward places
in between plants very easy. If you were weeding for a long time the gloves supplied
come in very useful for reducing the friction between the plastic and the skin.
There are a lot of devices put on the markets every year for
making life a little easier in the garden, most of them disappear quickly. The
Ringweeder seems different. Vincent has actually seen a real gardening problem
and found a solution. It was a gardening problem which I didn’t even know
existed!
The Ringweeder will also be extremely useful for people with
disabilities as no gripping is needed unlike trowels and other hand tools.