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Posts with tag sprinkler

The DIY Reel: Replace a Broken Sprinkler Head

Want to know what my biggest pet peeve is? OK, it may not be my biggest, b/c I have quite a few, but this one's high on my list. Ready? I hate nothing more than unpacking my seasonal items, only to find that they've been broken, or were, in fact, broken upon storing them.

Naturally, I'm beginning to store my gardening tools in preparation for a chilly winter season, and I'm making sure everything is in tact for next spring. After all, there's nothing worse than dragging out your garden hose, only to realize you failed to repair it last fall. First on my repair list? The sprinkler head:



One important thing to keep in mind when tackling a sprinkler head repair:

When using a hand trowel or old serrated knife to cut through the lawn or dirt surrounding the sprinkler head, be careful not to cut into the water line, which could make this project much more costly in the long run!

That's it --- get to work! Good luck, and thank you, Eric!

How to make a water slide

girl sliding down slide into pool

When I was a kid, many of my friends had slides going right into their pools. Cool. Not quite as cool as a water park, but it did the trick. Can you replicate the water park experience at home?

Homemade water slides are great fun... big fun... huge fun... if they're done right. I should probably write a Don't-it-yourself post on the contraption I have rigged in my backyard right now: a Little Tikes climber with the slide going right into my son's kiddie pool. Yes, it is wobbly and completely unsafe. Don't try this one at home, folks.

Instead, try making this water slide (reminds me of the old Slip 'N Slide from my childhood) from a piece of 4-ply plastic and a sprinkler. Stake it down every 4-5 feet so the plastic is stable, and send the kids whooshing. Rather than just hitting a patch of lawn at the bottom, you could always set up a trap to make a small "watering hole."

Avant Yard: 75 tricks to get your kids outdoors

Two-year-old girl wearing floral halter-neck dress crouches in a garden to examine plants
Summer vacation keeps rolling along. How long until your kids go back to school? Are they spending too much time lounging on the couch? Here are a bunch of summer projects to trick your kids away from their air-conditioned sanctuary and out into the great outdoors of, er, your backyard.

Okay, okay. So the backyard is not the great outdoors. True. But the main thing is to get the kiddos out in the fresh air, learning about nature, and learning about the noble pursuit of maintaining a garden.

Getting their hands dirty
1. Ask them to help with the weeding. Pay them a small amount of pocket money for their time.

Continue reading Avant Yard: 75 tricks to get your kids outdoors

Homemade water sprinkler

diamond-shaped sprinkler made from PVC pipesMake a sprinkler? Why on earth would you do that when you can go out to just about any store and grab a cheap one for less than ten dollars?

I'll tell you why:
  • You could be reusing waste materials from other projects to make your sprinkler.
  • It's an easy and fun project you could even do with the kids.
  • Speaking of kids, you could make an impressive play sprinkler for them to romp about in.
  • You could create a system that would water your entire lawn.
OK, so maybe you can't do the whole project with the kids (unless yours are old enough to help drill holes), but you can work with them to plan an elaborate sprinkler that will entertain them on hot summer days.

Continue reading Homemade water sprinkler

Gardener's five pet peeves of Spring

day lily
Yeah, yeah. Spring is awesome. All those pretty flowers blooming. Pastel clothing. Bunnies. Blossoms. Baskets of eggs. Picnics. Outdoor weddings. Lush green lawns. Hmm. What about the down-side of Spring? Yes. There is one. Here are my personal pet peeves regarding the prettiest, perkiest season of all:

1. Return of the lawn mower. Remember how "winterize lawn mower" was on your to-do list back in September? Just never got around to it, did you? Well, guess what? It's too late and now Spring is back. Time to deal with the consequences. Your mower, having been neglected in the garage for six months with a tank full of fuel, will be hell to start again. Have fun with that.

2. Wrestling the garden hose. Spring means planting time, and planting means watering to get new plants established. Planting is satisfying work, but my most hated gardening task is watering. Actually, the water is kind of lovely. It's the hose I hate.

Continue reading Gardener's five pet peeves of Spring

15 Uses for Old Pens

A few months ago, ReadyMade Magazine issued a challenge to its readers to come up with new uses for old pens. The winning project, Dead Pen Cutlery, is featured in the most recent issue.

I confess, I have a stash of old pens I can't bring myself to toss. Many aren't even dead, I just can't bring myself to use them because, alas, I'm a pen snob. However, although I think using pens as cutlery handles is pretty clever, I really don't need (or frankly want) to.

So I scoured the blogosphere for other ideas for giving old pens a second chance at life. Check out the findings:

My favorite of the ReadyMade runner-ups - turn old pens into garden labels (scroll down to see)

Chrisjob over at Curbly has 2 nifty projects made from old pens - a DIY sprinkler (also a ReadyMade runner-up), and a sewing caddy

From the DIY Network, turn your old pen into a bead holder, Pen Pal Doll, or a (fake) floral centerpiece.

While you're at it, check out this craftster's take on the centerpiece idea - table number holders made from old pens. (I see a pen-themed wedding here)

Gallery: 15 Uses for Old Pens

Dead Pen CutleryGarden MarkersDIY SprinklerDIY Sewing CaddyBead Holder

Continue reading 15 Uses for Old Pens

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