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Tools (continued)

Tools for Digging and Tamping

Shovels. Shovels are available in various blade shapes and handle lengths. A No. 2 shovel is standard. A smaller No. 1 shovel can be used. Fire shovels are good for scraping soil well off the trail.

Image of Square and Round point shovels.

When shifting or scooping materials, bend your knees and lift with your legs, not your back. Use your thigh as a fulcrum to push the shovel against. This makes the handle an efficient lever and saves your energy and your back. A shovel used with a pick or bar is most effective; picks or bars make prying with the shovel unnecessary.

Digging and Tamping Bars. A digging and tamping bar is about the same length as a rockbar, but much lighter. It is designed with a chisel tip for loosening dirt or rocks and a flattened end for tamping. These bars are not prying tools.

Image of a Digging bar

Tools for Brushing

Lopping Shears and Pruning Shears. Lopping and pruning shears are similar in design and use, although lopping shears have longer handles to improve reach and may have gear drives to increase leverage for thicker stems. Cutting edges vary, but generally one blade binds and cuts a stem against an anvil or beveled hook. We recommend the hook and blade shear for over-head cuts because the curved blades transfer the weight of the shears to the limb. The compound style cuts saplings better than hand saws or axes.

Image of Lopping shears

Bank Blades and Brush Hooks. Bank blades and brush hooks are designed specifically for cutting through thickets of heavy brush or saplings. Use them for clearing work that is too heavy for a scythe and not suited for an ax.

Image of a Bank blade and Brush hook.

Swedish Brush (Sandvik) Axes. These clearing tools work well in brushy thickets or when clearing in rocky or confined areas.

Image of a Swedish brush ax.

 

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