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 Let's talk about watering wands.

The one on the right is store-bought.  It costs about $14, and after a season or two of moderate use, it will leak all over the place, and you will throw it away in a fit of unbridled rage.  Its soft aluminum tube will bend if you raise your voice at it or use it in a strong breeze.

The one on the left is homemade from inexpensive plumbing parts.  The aluminum rosette on the end costs about $5, the rest of the parts total another $5.  It is sturdy and durable.  If it doesn't get left out to freeze in the winter, it will last many years.  It comes in infinite lengths and configurations, because you're making it yourself.  If you make it using threaded connections, you can replace the valve if it ever wears out (but it won't wear out).  Since both ends are garden hose connectors, it can also be used as an impromptu control valve between two hoses of you unscrew the rosette and attach another hose to that end (I do this when running a sprinkler, as it's easier to fine tune the flow with the ball valve on the wand).

Thanks for coming to my TED talk.

https://image.nostr.build/1bd8edbb14a0234cdcf3786fe3a2db8d97cb094deeb6615833daf8384846d42b.jpg

#garden #water #farm #diy #grownostr #tools