🌿 Aerate, Revive, Thrive! Your lawn deserves the best.
The Yard ButlerID-6C Manual Lawn Coring Aerator is a professional-grade gardening tool designed to enhance lawn health by removing soil cores, promoting air and nutrient penetration. With its durable steel construction and ergonomic design, this 37-inch aerator is perfect for small yards, ensuring ease of use and long-lasting performance.
T**B
Very Impressed
I've used it several times in the past 6 weeks.I get my entire lawn core aerated annually by a gas powered machine, but I bought this for the following uses:* The soil gets compacted at the gate from the front yard to the back yard. It's a funnel so all of the traffic goes in a narrow area, and it especially gets compacted when I have a big garden project that requires wheel barrows. I used it here when it first arrived and it did great, and then used it again after a big gardening project.* I have St Augustine grass so in the fall there are a few areas that get brown patch. This year, on those 3 spots I used the aerator and then top dressed with leaf mold compost prior to brown patch season. Should prevent the brown patch and help get some organic matter into the soil.* The darn cinch bugs killed a couple spots in lawn along the sidewalk. After killing off the cinch bugs, I used the aerator in the dead grass and top dressed with leaf mold compost. The core aeration will help get some organic matter into the soil while the St. Augustine grass fills in the compost.Positives:* It produces nice sized cores both in terms of depth and diameter.* It's very simple to use. It's mindless work and one of the few times being overweight pays off.* It's very sturdy and well constructed. Feels like something that will last many, many years.Negatives:* It's a lot of work so best for small areas. Rent a gas powered core aerator to do entire lawn or hire a contractor.* The last core stays in the tool so you need to push it out with a screwdriver at the end of the project.
H**N
Not hard to use
Great for small yards or spot work. Use after it has rained and boots may be needed. Did a great job on my clay soil.
A**S
Still best results compared to most other step types.
Bought one a few years ago at a Lowe's or Osh that I thought was the Hound Dog branded "Turf Hound" but it looked almost identical to the "Yard Butler" instead, so I don't know if the companies are related or maybe I just had a brain fart and filed the memory incorrectly. It worked well enough that I wore that down to nubs (see photo comparing the old one to new) thanks to hard clay soil that had to be pretty moist to penetrate making the tips rust, chip,or bend into the tube, and then having to file or grind the ends back to a functional point. When this seasons plugs were all coming out stumpy, I figured I could use a replacement and wondered if there might be a tool that didn't clog as much as that had. I think that in certain clays, it's inevitable, though you can minimize it by working it only after it's been watered and oiling the tines before and after using the tool.I have tried ones with more tines, and they are much harder to push into the ground since I am only 5'2 and 130lbs, so the two tines works better for me. I also find the height of the handle appropriate on this one, and the T design is comfortable because I can switch feet easily, without knocking a knee into the sides of the handle. I'm not sure how this compares with using the Hound Dog model, except that the center handle might help with pivoting the thing from side to side more easily when necessary, or perhaps the stepping space might be easier to access on the Dog version because it's more open. But then again, I also find it helpful that the shape above the step on the Butler helps ensure I don't just step THROUGH it and miss planting it down firmly.I did try the red one with thicker tines and the step "lifting bar" (see pics for side by sides) in hopes that it would be less clog prone, but found that the shape made it noteably more difficult to push into the ground than the slightly thinner and longer tines of the Butler. It may be because they are thicker, even though they are tapered, or maybe because they are cut square instead of at an angle like the Butler, which slid much more deeply and smoothly into the ground. Though the other one DID seem to be less likely to pack up with soil IN the tines, it also was much more problematic in dirt clogging AROUND the them instead (see pics). Go figure...The step bar on the red one didn't really add anything useful to the process for me, as it wasn't really helpful to try and use my foot to pick up the tool. It actually seemed a bit more in the way when switching feet, which I did much more frequently than trying to lift it with the foot. Some may prefer the thicker grips on the red one, but my hands are pretty large and I had no issues with the thinner ones.The one clear advantage of the red one is really probably the color itself, as I did have trouble locating the green Yard Butler on the lawn if I stepped away from it. The red is totally obvious to spot immediately.Lastly, I also preferred the resulting plug length of the Butler. The thickness of the other was beaten by the depth of extracted material with Yard Butler. (Last picture shows all 3 YB cores on the left vs 3 shorter of the other tool on the right). Definitely get an extra inch or more with the YB tool.YB beats the spike sort and more complicated coring setups on manual tools. There might be some real advantage to a rolling disc type on ebay, but it costs much more. If you have a large enough yard, though, it might be worth the cost over renting something powered, especially if you don't have something that needs a riding mower in size. My mom's lawn is probably 2000 sq ft, and it can be a workout and a long day to step core the whole thing alone, but I do it a little at a time whenever I visit and it's fine because the tool is always available and quiet enough to use in the middle of the night so the summer heat isn't overwhelming.I dig it. And it really does improve the lawn significantly. If I see it's getting a bit tired looking, I know it's time to step some air into thr soil and it thickens up nicely. For the money, it's a win in my book.Id like to try the other design I saw on Amazon too, which ejects the cores on the SIDE of the tine instead of through the top, as that might be less likely to pack into a clog, but I would want to know it was really better before spending twice as much money on it. For now I am doing fine with this and maybe will try the other if it wears down so far in a few years as the last one did. ..
�**�
👍👍👍👍👍 super easy, sturdy, and for those who said..
The media could not be loaded. ..its hard to get cores out.. each pass, IT PUSHES PREVIOUS CORES OUT...So worth it!..we've paid 3x as much for some jerk to do a lousy quick pass with a machine that actually further compacts lawn!..Took me maybe 30 min to do 1/3 of our big side of lawn ( we are on 1/3 acre w landscaping etc)..I went out after rain and it was easy peasy, kihda relaxing.. would be great job for kids too..and cant lie about it bc you see the cores all over...We have hard clay and rocks everywhere ..Which makes this better too than a machine which just goes where it goes. .if i hit a rock, i take the time to move over a bit...As far as wiggling it..resist the urge bc that compacts the wiggled soil.. ( also why you never use prong type aerators)Whats also cool is that you dont hafta get too close together bc since you'll own this instead of doing every 2 or 3 yrs, youll likely do it spring and fall..👍👍👍👍👍👍🌜🌛
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2 months ago
1 month ago