Monday, May 27, 2013

Four Reasons to Hate Your Old Garden Hose

Most serious gardeners – and a lot of homeowners who don’t garden – have a love-hate relationship with their garden hose – and there’s not a lot of love in that equation. Despite the fact that the garden hose is the single piece of gardening equipment that most gardeners use every single day during the gardening season, a lot of folks don’t put a lot of thought into buying the right one – and once they’ve bought one (usually the cheapest one they can find that meets their minimum requirements), they often don’t realize just how much of their time and energy they spend dealing with a recalcitrant, balky or downright surly garden hose. Is it time to replace your old hose with a shiny, new one that will do what you want it to – without getting all kinky and spitting water at you? Here are four reasons to hate your old garden hose enough to replace it with one that will do the job so much better.
It Doesn’t Reach Where You Want It to Go
Okay, admit it. You’ve done this: you stretch the hose as far as you can – usually going back to unkink it when it decides to get curled up on itself – turn the water as high as possible and aim the water for the one corner of the garden where you garden hose doesn’t quite reach.  Among other things, that kind of stretching isn’t good for your garden hose – it puts stress on the garden hose fittings and makes it more likely that it will separate from the tubing. More importantly, it makes it a whole lot harder to water the whole garden effectively.
It’s Got Splits and Leaks Here, There and Everywhere
Cheap hoses split and break with alarming regularity. Most commonly, they leak around the faucet, where they don’t attach properly. Better quality hoses are made from materials that resist splitting and separating from the garden hose fittings, so you don’t end up patching them with adhesive tape.
The Nozzle End Is Deformed and Misshapen
Speaking of garden hose fittings, cheap hoses often have fittings made of tin or other soft metal that bends and deforms with the slightest pressure. You never have to worry about your hose fitting your faucet when you invest in a good quality garden hose with solid brass or high quality plastic fittings.
It Could Be Poisoning You
You knew your garden hose was out to get you, but you probably didn’t realize that it’s trying to poison you. A number of consumer watchdog groups have tested the water that comes out of typical cheap hoses and found alarming amounts of lead and other chemicals. The solution is a drinking safe garden hose if you drink from your hose or fill kiddie pools with it.
Why put up with a gardening tool you hate when you can eliminate the problems and make your gardening much easier with a new garden hose?

1 comment:

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