Ease of Use

Fiskars Featured in THD EcoOptions (Canda & USA), (June, 08)

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Fiskars Receives Ease of Use Award (June, 2008)

FISKARS - COACH'S NEWS

In its 10th annual awards ceremony in 2007, Disability Rights Advocates (DRA) announced that Fiskars was a winner of the prestigious Eagle award for their efforts to improve the quality of life for people with disabilities. The PowerGear® Fiskars line has also received the Arthritis Foundation® Ease of Use Award.

DRA, a leading national disability law center, presented Fiskars with the Eagle award in the category of Universal Design, noting that the company has created numerous tools that aim to give better access to popular pastimes such as gardening.

"For Fiskars," the DRA says, "the principals of universal design mean a tree pruner that can be used with less than one-third the pressure required for a typical garden tool…and many other garden tools and accessories that make it easier – and in some cases, possible – for people with arthritis, carpal tunnel disorder, and other problems with hand strength to live their lives with greater ease."

Visit http://www.fiskars.com/ for more information. An interesting tidbit: Founded in 1649, Fiskars is one of the oldest companies in the world.

By Anne Moore

http://www.theplantcoach.org//content/archivecategory/0/9/9/2008/4/1/

Women Enjoy the Fiskars Ergonomic Tools (May 2008)

Best Ergonomic Gardening Tools For Women
WJACtv.com -Johnstown, PA USA


... Fiskars Power Pivot Grass Shears made the cut because they can go where a mower can’t. But the testers weren’t wowed by the HealthyBackGardenKneeler. ...
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Unique Tools at Fiskars (May, 2008)

Savvy Senior: Tips to help aging gardeners keep digging

Annapolis Capitol- Anapolis, MD USA
See www.radiusgarden.com or www.fiskars.com to find these types of unique tools, and visit www.gardeningwithease.com for a wide variety of ergonomic ...
See all stories on this topic

No Ache Gardening- May 1, 2008

No ache gardening; getting ready to roll in your RV

Westport Minuteman- Westport, CT USA


See www.radiusgarden.com and www.fiskars.com to find these types of unique tools, and visit www.gardeningwithease.com for wide variety of ergonomic ...
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Fiskars Featured in Garden Gate Magazine (Mar/Apr, 2008)

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Fiskars Featured in Today's Garden Center Magazine (Mar, 2008)

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Fiskars Garden Tools & Fiskars Pottery Blog/Media Coverage (Mar, 2008)

Growing and Mowing and Bears, Oh My!
PR Newswire (press release) - New York,NY,USA
Plant them in the Fiskars All-Natural Planter (Item #291478, $3.99) to be extra eco-conscious or make a beautiful garden arrangement for your favorite mama ...

Fiskars Gardening Tools
By sandyking
Trimming and pruning tools are an essential requirement for all levels of gardeners and the Fiskars line has an exceptional array of products for you to choose from. Powerful, well balanced and easy to use, pruning and trimming will ...
Writer/Photographer Sandy King's... - http://sandyking.wordpress.com

Fiskars Tree Pruners - Fiskars Pruning Stiks
By John
If you’ve ever had to pay to have a tree pruned, you know that the investment in a good tree pruner is one that will pay off handsomely in a single session of trimming. While a telescoping pruner can’t do everything that you get with a ...
How to Garden Guide - http://howtogardenguide.com

Tools & toys
Arkansas Democrat Gazette - AR,USA
Fiskars Garden Multi-Tool What’s to love: Both sides of pruning-shear blades are sharpened for different uses. What it does: The palm-size tool slices, ...
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Aging boomers dig ergonomic tools
By admin
Some handles, such as 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 fiskars .com. ...
Best Hobbies Live - http://www.besthobbieslive.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.

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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.

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    Fiskars Chief Design Engineer Olavi Linden in Associated Press Article

    Special tools don’t bother arthritis

    Gardeners with painful disabilities needn’t have such a tough row to hoe.

    Nearly one in five U.S. adults – some 46 million people – has arthritis, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. So it’s not surprising that scores of ergonomic toolmakers target this sizable group.

    Bruce Butterfield, research director for the National Gardening Association, said most gardeners are older than 55, and “looking for garden tools that are easier to use and help prevent aches and pain.”

    A great many garden tools are marketed with the word “ergonomic” in bold type on the labels, meaning they’re intended to maximize the efficiency and quality of someone’s work.

    But claims are one thing and performance is quite another, said Bob Denman, a blacksmith, tool designer and consultant from Boring, Ore.

    “Some garden tools are being developed without a great deal of study,” Denman said. “The manufacturer builds in a bend here and incorporates a twist there and calls it ergonomic. But then other tools are extremely well thought out.”

    There are several factors to consider in choosing a proper tool. First, it’s important to know that grip strength declines an average of 15 percent by a person’s early 50s, said Jeffrey Hoyle, an ergonomist with The Ergonomics Center of North Carolina, a research and consulting arm of North Carolina State University.

    And while women are about two-thirds as strong as men in general, studies indicate that their grip strength is about half that of men.

    It might seem logical, then, to focus on the tool’s grip. But it’s weight and power that make a tool truly ergonomic, said Olavi Linden, chief designer for Finland-based Fiskars Garden & Outdoor Living.

    “Handles are actually a very small part of the equation,” Linden said. “More power is what helps you avoid tendinitis. Extra-long, lightweight handles help prevent back pain.”

    Gardeners shopping for the right kind of ergonomic tool can weed out a large amount of discomfort and expense by “feel testing” in stores before they buy.

    “I’ve spent a lot of time watching people shopping for garden tools and most are bewildered,” said Denman, who does new product consulting for Corona Clipper Inc., a tool manufacturer in Corona, Calif. He said most make choices based on cost, not quality or feel. “Most people just don’t know how to buy ergonomically.”

    Here are some suggestions from Corona Clipper:

    • Check for weight. Any tool that feels heavy may become tiring with hard and repetitive use. Conversely, any tool that feels too light may be too flimsy to last. Look for tools that feel sturdy while providing control and reducing effort.

    • Test for balance and sensitivity. Tools should distribute their weight evenly or toward the working end, such as at the head of an ax or the point of a shovel.

    • Study grip size. Find something soft and comfortable. Overlarge grips can tire muscles and strain nerves in fingers and wrists over time. Non-slip grips generally are safer and help prevent blisters.

    • Tools should be easy to maintain. Look for quality materials and practical, proven designs.

    Once you’ve gotten the tools home, trust your instincts, said the Ergonomic Center’s Hoyle. Just taking breaks can make a big difference.

    “If it hurts, don’t do it,” he said. “If you are using a tool incorrectly, it is not ergonomic.”

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