Independent reviews of Gardening Equipment — pruners, trowels, watering cans, sharpeners. Buy-once durability framework.
| Founded year: | 2026 |
| Country: | Chile |
| Funding rounds: | Not set |
| Total funding amount: | Not set |
Description
Gardening Equipment is an independent review publication for serious garden tools. We exist because the category is drowning in disposable junk — stamped-blade trowels that bend on stony beds, watering cans whose plastic roses spit in clumps, hedge trimmers built to last a single season — and because most buying guides are affiliate roundups stapled onto Amazon best-seller lists.We do the opposite. Every tool is evaluated against the same four-question durability framework: Is it forged or stamped? Are the parts replaceable? Is the warranty real and enforced? Has the manufacturer been around long enough to honour it ten years from now? Four yeses earn a recommendation. Anything less gets an honest write-up about what's missing — and a better pick in the same category.
The brands that pass are the ones gardeners have quietly relied on for generations: Felco (Swiss-forged pruners since 1948), Niwaki (Japanese hand-forged knives and shears), Bahco (ergonomic French pruners since 1862), Burgon & Ball (RHS-endorsed Sheffield tools since 1730), Haws (Birmingham-made watering cans since 1886), Sneeboer (Dutch hand-forged spades since 1913), West County (US-made work gloves), and Stihl (German cordless power tools).
No paid placement. No sponsored verdicts. Affiliate links are disclosed on every page. Read the methodology, then explore the Gardening Equipment Atlas — the full coverage map, sorted by category and by use case.