- Bonsai collecting tool
- Metal detecting tool
- Multi-purpose garden tool
- Hunting, fishing tool
- Comes with a heavy black vinyl plastic sheath and belt loop
Product Description
Joshua Roth Stainless Steel Hori-Hori digging tool 1516 This is a special version of Joshua Roth’s #1515 Hori-Hori digging tool. The stainless steel blade is very sharp and concave shaped for scooping soil and other materials. Because of its sharpness, it is excellent as a general purpose sporting knife. An indispensable tool for digging in the garden. It cuts and scrapes weed, roots and vegetables. Master gardeners love it. Comes with a heavy black vinyl plastic sheath and belt loop. You need to try it for yourself to appreciate what a great garden tool it is. 6 1/2-inch blade, 11 3/4-inch overall length. Made in Japan Some uses: Weeding, cutting roots, transplanting, removing bonsai plants from pots, sod cutting, dividing perennials, metal detecting, collecting and more. This tool can be considered the Swiss Army Knife for many outdoor uses from gardening, collecting, digging, sawing, chopping, measuring to untold other uses including but not limited to hunting and fishing.


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5 Responses
WEEDS SCREAM AND RUN when they see me coming with the hori hori. (Note that I don’t know whether one hori hori brand is any better than another. It’s the tool itself that’s so great.)
If I could, I’d get one for each of my gardener friends. Sometimes I might need a spade or pruners or shovel, but overall, the hori hori is often the only tool I take outside to plant and weed.
Solid, unbending steel helps pry out deep weeds or dig a hole even in packed clay or gravel. The serrated edge is great for butterflying root-bound plants. And the centimeter markings helps me properly place seedlings and bulbs.
One thing I’d recommend that’s been really helpful for me is to paint the handle with fluorescent paint AND tie some long (15-20″) fluorescent plastic tape through the hole so that you don’t lose it in the dirt; there’ll always be some pink or orange ribbon sticking out even if you bury the hori-hori by mistake.
I’ve buried my hori hori twice. Once I actually called the local metal detector club to help me find it (it was within plain view of my back door for 4 months). The other time, I just ran out and bought a new one.
I’ve never damaged the blade on one of these. I killed the wood handle by leaving it buried for 10 months in soggy Seattle, but I still use the blade alone.
ANOTHER GARDEN TOOL RECOMMENDATION: Get a Circle Hoe.
Rating: 5 / 5
Posted on June 11th, 2010 at 11:34 am
You open the gift box. Yes! it’s just what you wanted! You drop the wrapping paper, leave the wine glass, and the astonished friends, you zoom out to the garden even though it’s perfectly dark by now, and you find that dandelion illuminated by the front door’s light. You heft the hori hori in your hand. You are a warrior. You are invincible. The enemy will die. This sturdy, hefty tool feels great in the palm of your hand. It easily slides into the soil alongside the offending dandy. A little pressure, and pop! the root, the leaves, the whole rosette of the heinous green Medusa is air born like a cork out of a bottle. You think yes! finally! the war is over, I am The Gardener.
Rating: 5 / 5
Posted on June 11th, 2010 at 2:32 pm
I’ve had it only twelve hours and wonder how I ever got along in the garden without it. What a wonderful tool! I have already used it as a trowel for planting; the blade made short work of an interfering tree root. I loosened weed roots in a flower bed for easy removal without disturbing a lot of soil, and pried weeds from the cracks in the sidewalk. Edging along the front walk was a breeze. I like it that there is a hole in the handle for easy hanging, too.
Rating: 5 / 5
Posted on June 11th, 2010 at 3:11 pm
I’m a master gardener and like a garden without weeds. This is the tool for weeding, cutting flowers, deadheading, and cutting down masses of flowers in the fall. You can also dig with it very well. I like to only carry one tool and this is it. It is VERY sharp when new. It is well worth the money. I’ve given them for gifts and always keep at least two. (one for my man…..)
Rating: 5 / 5
Posted on June 11th, 2010 at 4:47 pm
I bought the Hori Hori stainless steel garden knife because an equivalent product that I had purchased previously broke after a few months of use. That tool (a Fiskars product) worked fine until a design flaw in the handle resulted in the handle coming apart. The Hori Hori knife has a very robust handle and blade which allows it to survive the stresses induced when I pry out tough weeds. One feature that the Fiskars product had that I really liked was a groove cut into the pointed end of the blade. That grove was very useful in grabbing the stems of weeds which made it much easier to pry them out of the soil. The Hori Hori knife doesn’t have this notch. I bought two Hori Hori knives so I may modify one of them to add a notch just to see if I can replicate that feature. All in all, the Hori Hori is a very useful tool (even without the notch) and I would recommend it to every gardener.
Rating: 4 / 5
Posted on June 11th, 2010 at 6:41 pm
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