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February 2008

Fiskars Easy Reach Pruners Featured in Milwaukee Journal (Feb,2008)

Garden Variety Jan Riggenbach OUCH-FREE PRUNING

The challenge Pruning dense or thorny shrubs and roses is a painful proposition You often get scratched especially when reaching into tight spaces with your hand pruners The solution The extra long, handles of Fiskar Easy Reach Bypass Pruners (pictured below) allow you to reach into dense growth in the center of a shrub without getting scratched.  Thanks to the lever action the tool has an unusually narrow profile that fits into tight spaces even when the handles are fully open (depending on the size of your pruning jobs, you can choose either 15 inch or 25 inch pruners. Plus Fiskars Power Lever technology uses levers to multipy your cutting power helping make light work out of your pruning chores The pruners are surprisingly lightweight for their size, which helps reduce fatigue, Extra Long handles mean less bending, thus saving strain on your back. While other hand pruners are operated with one hand this long handled tool easily accommodates both hands for added strength and "comfort A nonstick coating on the sfharp bypass blades helps the blades slice through the wood and provides a clean cut. Plastic housing that snaps over the business end of the pruners for storage protects the blade and includes a handy notch for hanging. The tool comes with *a lifetime* warranty. Minuses: The Easy Reach pruners can't handle branches more than three fourths inch in diameter so you'lI need loppers for those bigger branches Sources: For more information or to find a retailer near you contact Fiskars Garden & Outdoor Living Customer Service Department at (800) 500 4849 or visit www fiskars coitf Prices range from about $17 to $25 depending on size and location of purchase*

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 2/10/08

Fiskars Shovels Discussed In Baltimore Examiner (Feb, 2008)

Gardening industry grows savvy to entice boomers to cash register

By Eileen Putman

Baby boomers don't get old. They just develop arthritic knees.

When I did, the only device that allowed me to work in the garden without struggling to get up and down was a drab little stool that looked embarrassingly old-ladyish.

But the gardening industry has grown savvier. It's fast producing lawn and garden tools that boomers can use in their graying years but that don't look so, well, elderly. These cool tools are efficient, don't harm the environment, and play to the self-mythology of an activist, can-do, forev- " er-youthful generation.

Today's tools are colorful easier for aging eyes to see and ergonomic delivering results for less muscle. They're cushion-gripped, streamlined, with a fun factor.

Here's a look at some of the latest tools and trends: PREPARING SOIL:

Plants don't grow well when the soil is compacted, so you need a way to dig and get more air and organic matter into it. For big landscaping projects, like putting in a lawn or vegetable garden, you may need the big guns a tiller to turn the soil or a coring machine to poke holes in it.

Tiller: Traditional gas-powered machines pollute and are heavy. Newer electric tillers produce no carbon emissions and weigh less. A flame-colored electric tiller costs $249 at Gardener's Supply. Visit gardeners.com.

Digging: Long-nandled shovels with a bigger flat area for the foot allow you to use more leg muscles as you dig. Some handles, like those on shovels made by FiskarSj are shaped like an oversized "D" to make it easier to grip and reduce hand fatigue. Visit fiskars.com.

For smaller jobs, a bright-red silicone-handled "soil scoop" selling for $24.95 at Gardener's Supply has one serrated edge and a pointed tip designed to slice through roots and compacted soil and break up clay. Radius Garden makes a lightweight trowel with a chartreuse-colored handle curved to fit the palm and reduce wrist stress. It's $12-$15 online and at stores. Visit lifewithease.com or radiusgarden.com. PLANTING:

Whether you're planting seeds, bulbs or sod, this task is usually harder than you think it will be. There's a lot of bending and kneeling. One solution is to get a small, lightweight cart or knee aid.

Carts and stools: Home Depot sells a $34 Garden Rocker that, despite its name, is not a rocking chair but a contoured, adjustable seat; you can buy a $15 nonslip matching cushion with tool pockets. The company also sells a $39 kneeler aimed at reducing back strain. Visit homedepot.com.

The $34.95 kneeler at Gardener's Supply becomes a bench when you flip it. Smith & Hawken sells a $39 foldable kneeler; visit smithandhawken.com. The Garden Hopper, a rolling stool with an interior storage area, sells for $19.95 at activeforever.com. www.baltimorexaminer.com

Fiskars Garden Multi-Tool Featured in Popular Mechanics (Feb, 2008)

Fiskars Garden Multi-Tool Brings Leatherman Convergence to Your Plants

Published in the March 2008 issue.


(Photograph by Chris Eckert/Studio D)

By sharpening the normally dull sides of a pruning shear, the Fiskars Garden Multi-Tool ($20) brings Leatherman-like convergence to your prized plants. While we love the added functionality, be warned: You may be used to grabbing regular shears by the blade, but one squeeze of these could be enough to keep your hands out of the garden until harvest. fiskars.com

Fiskars PowerGear Blog Coverage (Feb, 2008)

Oldest/Newest

2/20/2008 – 1:26 pm

Today is Oldest-Newest Day! Yep, I’m just making this stuff up as I go along. Feel free to play along!

Today I’ve picked my oldest and newest tools. First up is my newest, a pair of Fiskars PowerGear Bypass pruners. When I run across a tool that has the potential to make my life easier and costs less than twenty bucks, I grab it.
I bought a pair of these at Home Depot Sunday to replace my ancient pair of Corona heavy duty pruners. The Coronas held up under unbelievably horrid conditions; I’d leave them out in the rain over and over again, then have Arthur scrape the rust off and re-sharpen them.
The Fiskars might not last as long under my care, but I don’t care; anyone who can harness the power of physics and hand it to me has my undying respect. I was just out cutting 1″ round ficus branches with this sucker!  http://www.pamibe.com

Fiskars At the Northwest Flower & Garden Show - Seattle Pi.com (Feb, 2008)

The Grounded Gardener: Plot your path to a splendid season

Scratch that garden itch and don't miss these stops to get you ready for spring

By MARTY WINGATE
SPECIAL TO THE P-I  www.seattlepi.com

THE NORTHWEST FLOWER & Garden Show gives gardeners a chance to break out of winter for five days and shop for the coming season. Tools, accessories, furniture and plants, plants, plants are to be had, and here's where you can find them.

Garden accessories and decor are for indoors and out, helping to bring a bit of the natural world inside. At Wilburton Pottery (booth 1202), clay tiles are made from molds with designs that reflect plants, animals and other designs, often with an ancient quality. A small square tile with pinecones, berries or leaf motif is $15, or $48 for a tile with a color wash. Larger sizes are available.

The ovenproof pottery from Off the Walz Studio (420) adds color and life to the table. The gourmet salad set includes a platter, serving bowls, condiment dishes and more, and all fit together in an ingenious way to create one large, leafy head of lettuce ($399-799). Smaller single pieces are available, such as the asparagus platter ($40) and ear of corn ($20) -- taking on the appearance of what you can serve in them.

English Bridgewater pottery in all its flora and fauna glory is found at the Country Garden Antiques booth (204). Eggcups ($16), baby mugs ($23), cat and dog dishes ($28, $48) are only a few of the delightful pieces. For car enthusiasts, there's a Mini Cooper mug ($28).

At Lucca Statuary (1313), you can save 30 percent on special orders at the show. That would put that great set of lion bookends at just $34.30. Pick up a coupon to use at their Fremont store.

Decorative glazed tiles (starting at $12) at Convergence (616) and patterned mosaic vases ($99) at Artcycle Mosaics (614) add color to the garden, wall or table at any time of year.

The show is the place to compare hand pruners, loppers, pruning saws and weeders, to learn which one feels best in your hand. Lee Valley Tools (500) carries high-quality English spades and Fiskars (2244) -- directly across the aisle from the P-I booth -- has a new line of hand tools at special show prices. The Power Pivot tools, which reduce hand fatigue, are $14.99 for the small bypass pruners, $19.99 for the medium size or the grass shears.

Look for nitrile gloves for $7 a pair at Seed Ballz (312) and Wildflower Seed Co. (411). The material is tough but thin, so you can even pick up seeds, and a breathable knit backing keeps your hands cool.

You can read about and look at pictures of greenhouses, but at the show you can walk inside. Check out the display models from SunGlo (2127) and Charley's Greenhouse & Garden (202), and talk with the experts about what you need your greenhouse to do.

I dare you to walk past the Chocolate Flower Farm booth (2430) without following your nose to the chocolate-scented candles -- in various sizes, starting at about $8.50.

Here's a great opportunity for all of us who love own-root roses: you can order from Heirloom Garden Roses at its booth (2309) and get a discount.

Get ready for summer -- buy your begonia tubers now. Antonelli Brothers (2414) sell basket or upright tubers at $4 each, six for $22.50 or -- the show special -- $45 for a dozen (plus a bag of fertilizer).

Lily bulbs abound at B&D (401, 2320) and at the Lily Pad (2230), which has a three-pack of the fragrant crimson-and-white Oriental lily 'Starfighter' for $8.99 and a three-pack of the Oriental hybrid 'Serrano,' a soft yellow and fragrant, for $15.99.

Emery's Garden (2305) brings back a popular item -- you-pick 'Stargazer' lily bulbs for $2 each, three for $5, or 'African Queen' bulbs for $4. Plus stick plants -- my favorite way to buy. You'll find small Japanese maples, including 'Butterfly' and 'Sango Kaku,' for just $10 each.

Dormant perennials in bags of cedar shavings or sawdust are hot tickets at the show. You can find an enormous range of plants, and at great prices. Sundquist Nursery (2316) has an unusual gold-leaved Clematis alpina cultivar called 'Stolwijk Gold' for $20, and deep red Alstroemeria 'Inca Adore' for $10. It's not invasive!

Far Reaches Farm (2110) offers the beautiful peony with the unpronounceable name: Paeonia mlokosewithschii, better known as molly-the-witch. It's an incredible deal at $10. Sweet pink Rhodohypoxis is $8, and there are lots of kniphofias.

Lots more great dormant perennials can be found at Woodland Gardens (2120) and Naylor Creek Nursery (2220).

If I could buy an entire booth, I'd take Killdeer Farms Geraniums (2204), full of all the fancy-leaved pelargoniums I love. 'Frank Headley,' 'Happy Thoughts,' Mrs. Cox' and more -- $3 and up.

Many will find homes in my pots this year.

Marty Wingate, a Master Gardener, is the author of two garden books. She can be contacted at: martywin@earthlink.net.

Fiskars Project Orange Thumb - Recent Blog Coverage (Feb, 2008)

Journal 11
By itrain(itrain)
Laurie handed the Project Orange thumb grant application to the grant writer. She said we have competition as many are applying . that's okay . We need to get better at getting better! Mid-semester project evaluation due Feb. 25 . ...
itrain - http://itrain.livejournal.com/

The Growing Connection: Forums / Grants Available / Fiskars ...
Fiskars' Project Orange Thumb Offers Grants to Support Community ... http://www.fiskars.com/content/garden_en_us/Garden/Community/project +orange+thumb ...

Update on Project Orange Thumb/Fiskar Grant
By Williamson Garden Club(Williamson Garden Club)
Hi - I just wanted to let everyone know what the status is with the grant application. We have finished writing Questions 2-5 and have the most recent version of the Garden Plan&Design, as well as a color painting representing the ...
GROW - the Williamson Garden Club - http://grow-thewilliamsongardenclub.blogspot.com/

Fiskars Shovels and Easy-To-Use Pruners Discussed in AP Article (Feb, 2008)

Labor-Saving Tools Target Boomers

When I did, the only device that allowed me to work in the garden without struggling to get up and down was a drab little stool that looked embarrassingly old-ladyish.

But the gardening industry has grown savvier. It's fast producing lawn and garden tools that boomers can use in their graying years - but that don't look so, well, elderly. Cool tools that are efficient, don't harm the environment, and play to the self-mythology of an activist, can-do, forever-youthful generation.

We are a finicky lot, but a powerful market force, 78 million strong. A yearly survey by the nonprofit National Gardening Association found that people 45 and older are the backbone of the industry - accounting for about 64 percent of gardening retail sales.

Many of us, though, don't have much time for working in the yard or tending that backyard patch of tomatoes. And if we're retired, we're probably downsizing our gardens, or at least not starting new ones.

In fact, sales to gardening do-it-yourselfers are down - $34 billion in 2006, a decline from the previous year and below even 2001's figure of $37.7 billion, according to the NGA. With the economic downturn, gardening isn't a spending necessity. The industry is hoping the movement toward greening the planet will at least help at the cash register.

Today's tools are colorful - easier for aging eyes to see - and ergonomic - delivering results for less muscle. They're cushion-gripped, streamlined, with a fun factor.

Companies like Fiskars, Radius Garden and OXO are known for such tools. The idea is to make it easier for the backyard gardener to sit, plant, water, weed and reap the fruits of relatively modest labor.

Will Raap, who in 1983 founded Gardener's Supply, the big Vermont catalog company, based his business on "enabling" tools for people with physical limitations, mainly the disabled and elderly. But he's seen a resurgence in products like his original Easy Kneeler, which has handles that help people get up and down to garden.

"It's a pretty good example of a product that got a little slow, then when the boomers got a little tired they were interested," said Raap, at 58 a boomer himself. His target customers are people who, like him, "get tired a little easier" but still want the exercise and satisfaction of gardening.

Bruce Butterfield, NGA's market research director, said boomer-friendly tools could boost the industry because gardening "becomes more fun if you're not walking away with aches and pains."

Here's a look at some of the latest tools and trends:

PREPARING SOIL:

Plants don't grow well when the soil is compacted, so you need a way to dig and get more air and organic matter into it. For big landscaping projects, like putting in a lawn or vegetable garden, you may need the big guns - a tiller to turn the soil or a coring machine to poke holes in it.

-Tiller: Traditional gas-powered machines pollute and are heavy. Newer electric tillers produce no carbon emissions and weigh less. A flame-colored electric tiller costs $249 at Gardener's Supply. See http://www.gardeners.com.

-Digging: Long-handled shovels with a bigger flat area for the foot allow you to use more leg muscles as you dig. Some handles, like those on shovels made by Fiskars, are shaped like an oversized "D" to make it easier to grip and reduce hand fatigue. Fiskars' signature orange-handled tools are available at many retail stores. See http://www.fiskars.com.

For smaller jobs, a bright red silicone-handled "soil scoop" selling for $24.95 at Gardener's Supply has one serrated edge and a pointed tip designed to slice through roots and compacted soil and break up clay. Radius Garden makes a lightweight trowel with a chartreuse-colored handle curved to fit the palm and reduce wrist stress. It's $12-$15 online and at stores. See http://www.lifewithease.com or http://www.radiusgarden.com.

--

PLANTING:

Whether you're planting seeds, bulbs or sod, this task is usually harder than you think it will be. There's a lot of bending and kneeling. One solution is to get a small, lightweight cart or knee aid.

-Carts and stools: Home Depot sells a $34 Garden Rocker that, despite its name, is not a rocking chair but a contoured, adjustable seat; you can buy a $15 non-slip matching cushion with tool pockets. The company also sells a $39 kneeler aimed at reducing back strain. See http://www.homedepot.com.

The $34.95 kneeler at Gardener's Supply becomes a bench when you flip it. Smith & Hawken sells a $39 foldable kneeler; see http://www.smithandhawken.com. The Garden Hopper, a rolling stool with an interior storage area, sells for $19.95 at http://www.activeforever.com.

Wheelbarrows have moved beyond those old heavy metal contraptions. A big polyethylene cart at NGA's garden shop sells for $199.95 and has a hinged mechanism that lets you tip the cart or tub for easier unloading. See http://nga-gardenshop.stores.yahoo.net/index.html.

-Bulb planters: OXO, the "Good Grips" tool company, makes a quick-release bulb planter with a handle wide enough for both hands, to make it easier to dig. A lever replaces the soil after the bulb is planted, and sells for $12.99 at http://www.oxo.com.

MAINTENANCE:

Hand tools: Fiskars and OXO make ergonomic pruners, lopper, weeders and more. Several Fiskars pruners and loppers are approved by the Arthritis Foundation's Ease-of-Use program. Check the company's Web site.

Lawnmowers: Gasoline-powered motors can be difficult to start after a winter hiatus, and are noisy and polluting. Electric mowers have been around for years, but so has the problem of running over those long extension cords. Neuton, a Vermont company, has a battery-powered mower that sells for under $400. It's lightweight, nonpolluting and runs for up to an hour on a single charge. See http://www.drpower.com/CSTM_Neuton_Home.aspx.

Feeding: The trend is away from chemicals that harm the environment. Organic products and composting are big. Smith & Hawken has a $129 Biostack Composter made of recycled polyethylene with bottomless tiers that it says makes turning the compost pile easier.

Self-contained watering systems reduce your labor but can be complicated. Gardener's Supply has a $79.95 solar power system that waters up to 20 plants at a time. It comes with a 4-inch-square solar panel, 15-foot cord, pump, tubing, drippers, stakes and mounting clamps, and can be used with water-soluble fertilizer.

    Share:

    Fiskars Post Hole Digger Featured In Mother Earth News (Feb,2008)

    Best Tools for Fencing

    Many people with several acres eventually want to raise livestock. To contain animals on a pasture, you will need a good fence. The following tools will help you build a good fence and maintain it over time.

    Many people with several acres eventually want to raise livestock. To contain animals on a pasture, you will need a good fence. The following tools will help you build a good fence and maintain it over time.

    POST-SETTING TOOLS

    If there’s a tool that’s most necessary for fence-building work, it’s something with which to dig postholes. Even if you plan to use metal T-posts—which you can just pound into the ground—you will need to dig deep postholes for the corner posts.

    The easiest way to dig postholes is to use an auger powered by a tractor or built-in engine. An auger is a large shaft with spiral grooves that works like a giant drill bit for boring holes into the earth. If you don’t own an auger, you can rent one from a home-improvement store or see if a neighbor has one you can borrow. Tractor-driven posthole augers can quickly create the standard 8-inch-wide, 36-inch-deep holes required for corner and line posts in most soils.

    Rocks are the bane of the fence-builder’s existence. Even medium-sized stones in the soil can stop the progress of a large auger, and may break the shear pin in the process. And unless the size of your auger specifically fits the diameter of the post, the posts won’t always fit well in their holes. That is why it’s a good idea to equip yourself with posthole-digging hand tools, at least as a supplement to any power auger.

    If your fencing project is small, then hand tools might be all you need. The most basic tools for digging postholes are a long-handled shovel to loosen and remove soil, a heavy 6-foot pry bar to break up clods of earth and to tamp around your post, and a posthole digger. This tool is essentially two opposing shovels connected by a fulcrum. Fiskars makes a model with handles specially designed to dig deeper holes.

    Setting your wooden posts perfectly plumb might not boost fence life by much, but the fence will look better. A post level makes this task easy. Strap the post level to the post (using large rubber bands), center both bubbles as you hold up the post and then fill in the soil around the outside. For wide holes, an 8-pound sledgehammer can be used to tamp the dirt and make your corner posts secure, or a long-handled poker or pry bar can be used for tamping down the soil around each post. Farmers often make homemade tampers from discarded automobile axles, as well. Because of the extra strain exerted on corner posts, it’s important that the tamping job around them is done well. As you fill the dirt back in around the post, tamp well after every few inches of added dirt.

    Project Orange Thumb Recent Coverage (Feb, 2008)

    Project Orange Thumb
    Community organizations, schools, gardening clubs, senior centers and other groups are invited to apply for Fiskars’ 2008 Project Orange Thumb grant. ...

    Thumbs Up From The Pros
    Plan a Sunflower Maze With a Child; Prepare Exhibits for Your Local Flower Show; Apply For Project Orange Thumb Grant; Remove Overwintering Insects on Trees and Shrubs; Tend Indoor Plants. Read More.
    Mid-Atlantic Regional Report - http://www.garden.org/regional/report/current/13

    Garden project seeks applications
    Project Orange Thumb, a program that awards grants for community garden projects, will accept applications until Feb. 15.
    statesmanjournal.com - News - http://www.statesmanjournal.com

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