S
Smee
Guest
In the early spring, my wife and I went to Atwoods (a rancher's supply store) so she could get some "gardening tools. She picked up a little shovel identical to the one in this picture:
I figured, $3 dollars, it couldn't be much of a tool. So far though, it has been used as a hammer, a prybar, run over by my pickup, and a few other items that it wasn't designed for. Other than some scars on the wooden handle and a few scratches from digging up cinderblocks and prying them apart, they could pass for twins.
This thing tough!!!
I went out and got this one, and if my grinder will handle it, I figured narrowing it down a little bit and putting a bit of an edge --- maybe serrated on one side --- it might make a pretty decent diggin tool.
I figured, $3 dollars, it couldn't be much of a tool. So far though, it has been used as a hammer, a prybar, run over by my pickup, and a few other items that it wasn't designed for. Other than some scars on the wooden handle and a few scratches from digging up cinderblocks and prying them apart, they could pass for twins.
This thing tough!!!
I went out and got this one, and if my grinder will handle it, I figured narrowing it down a little bit and putting a bit of an edge --- maybe serrated on one side --- it might make a pretty decent diggin tool.