Submitted by Snailspaced t3_yaoru0 in BuyItForLife

Indispensable backyard garden cart. Original frame; wood replaced only once. Original hubset and axle. Every single winter outside in Eastern Canada. Multiple (illegal) tows behind the car. 100s of loads of compost and rocks and dirt and manure. Hose it down and have at it. Absolutely indestructible

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Dunaliella t1_itc35sg wrote

These are great. I remember my parents having one of these.

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foospork t1_itczrxs wrote

I still have one of these. I believe mine dates from the ‘80s.

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Bioshock_Jock t1_itdzumg wrote

Yup mine too, used it to haul firewood in the winter from the woodpile to the garage.

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skonevt t1_itc3e8y wrote

Vermont quality right there.

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Snailspaced OP t1_itc498a wrote

Yup! I remember my father drove us to the Maine / New Brunswick border at Houlton to meet the guy who was delivering it up from Vermont! Different times for sure.

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whereswalda t1_itcaa60 wrote

Holy snuts, we have that cart too! I had no idea it was that old. My grandfather uses it nearly every day to shift leaves, yard waste, and equipment. I think he may have put new tires in at some point but that's about it.

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furbowski t1_itcrt9d wrote

I've been using mine to pull firewood for the past twenty years or so.

The axle is the only original part left.

BIFL? Depends on the life lived.

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Snailspaced OP t1_itdetl7 wrote

Yup it’s only as durable as the wood for sure - when my dad replaced the bottom and the sides in the 90s he used a wider gauge plywood, and it’s put in 30 years. But for an original 200 dollar (cdn) investment…

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furbowski t1_itdkxag wrote

For sure the thing gets used daily. Rebuilt in heavy sub-floor plywood with an extra layer around all the joints and edges. I throw loads of firewood into it.

But if I ever make another one I'll buy the axle and wheels only, and build the rest myself.

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tipsycup t1_itelvzt wrote

We also have a garden cart of Theseus, a neighbor was throwing it out because he didn’t want to do the second redecking in 30+ years. Definitely worth the investment on our part.

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DiscreetLobster t1_itc6byj wrote

My parents bought one of those when I was shorter than it. I visited them recently and it's still going strong three decades later. The wheels have been replaced once or twice and it's had other bits repaired, but with pretty minimal care it keeps on trucking!

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endfossilfuel t1_itc9eh4 wrote

These are the absolute best. Light enough for a child to use, wheels big enough to get over basically any obstacle, strong enough we never managed to break ours. Regrettably left behind in a previous move.

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oles_lackey t1_itcldnv wrote

My grandma had this style of cart. When we were little kids, we’d help her with garden work and in return she’d pop us on top of the pile we collected and pull us around the yard. Good times!

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Snailspaced OP t1_itg4y3o wrote

This right here is a shared childhood memory. Not much chance though of my late 70s father giving his late 40s son a ride around on that wagon full of leaves now though!!

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Fuzzy_Inevitable9748 t1_itcutjy wrote

Hmm never seen a cart like that, such a nice design, easy carry, easy dump, easy to scrape flat sides, common cheap to replace wheels, easy to replace side boards.

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Snailspaced OP t1_itde5jx wrote

Yup - dead simple design and astonishing load limit but so we’ll balanced you really don’t strain and struggle to move 100s of lbs of stuff at a time - my dad made it a competition to see who could pull the most manure!

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makinggrace t1_itd00vk wrote

Neither have I (midwesterner). Here most people have wheelbarrows which are useless IMHO.

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Fuzzy_Inevitable9748 t1_itd4wv8 wrote

Ya a wheel barrow is good for cement, dirt, gravel, basically just heavy earth, but sucks for anything lighter like sticks, leaves or even fire wood, this looks like it can haul 6-8 wheel barrow loads of leaves without leaving the trail the wheel barrow does.

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sugarbean09 t1_itczv4l wrote

my grandfather used to run me around the farm on one of those every time I visited when I was little. good memories.

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Snailspaced OP t1_itd92f4 wrote

Oh hell yes! My brother would haul my sister and I in this too - at age 10 it was pretty much as close to a Roman chariot as you were gonna get!

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sugarbean09 t1_itde90s wrote

exactly! I was not a happy camper when they were actually using it for work, haha

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warp54 t1_itchi2q wrote

Worked at a lake club. Had several. Used them to load up leaves / tools or coolers full of beer and pulled them through the woods to the camp sites. Great carts.

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MPM5 t1_itcmrz9 wrote

Wow, definitely had one of these growing up. Wish i still had one, we used it for everything

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PersnicketyHazelnuts t1_itcsegp wrote

Ha, I had to make sure my brother wasn’t the one who posted this. My parents had one exactly like this my whole childhood, but it has been now been passed on to my brother who has a bigger piece of property with fruit trees and a sizable garden. I’m betting he even used it this weekend.

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Fsoumish t1_itcu7g0 wrote

My grandma still has one

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SuperElitist t1_itd5pcy wrote

Why is this not in my life. I've been using a wheelbarrow.

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Snailspaced OP t1_itd8xaz wrote

And they come in multiple sizes for small or large gardens

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Ska-jayjay t1_itdi8ng wrote

In europe we put the axle in the middle so you won’t have to carry half the load…

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master_uv_none t1_itf0fwi wrote

You can get them with solid core tires. The tires were a weak point when always overloading.

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Snailspaced OP t1_itg4rih wrote

Yup - in this photo the tires are both flat - cheap bmx 20” replacements are likely before winter

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dudedisguisedasadude t1_itfe4ey wrote

Damn do you store it outside year round? All the ones I have seen usually have painted OSB panels that have rotted away from all the moisture over the years. Frames are tanks though and they just need some new wood and some grease on the bearings and they are good to go again.

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Snailspaced OP t1_itg4nrv wrote

My folks even use it in the wintertime to haul wood to the house - dad snow blows a trail to the woodpile then loads it up! Boards we’re replaced in early 90s with thicker plywood but that’s going on 30 years now and it doesn’t show significant signs of rot or decay

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snap2 t1_iteis1o wrote

Perfect for the Oregon Country Fair!

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likebutta222 t1_item24i wrote

Is this a will barrow?

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Snailspaced OP t1_itg57f7 wrote

Nope it’s way way better - balanced front to back with the axle placement, side to side with 2 wheels, the back gate lifts out for long loads, it’ll hold 500 lbs ( or more ) at a go and a 10 year old can pull it with little difficulty. Best thing that ever came out of the 1970s Harrowsmith magazine advertising section

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Spraypainthero965 t1_itg60r7 wrote

I've never used one, but this thing looks like it would bend/break if you looked at it too hard.

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Soft_Use229 t1_itd54l2 wrote

...so you replaced the wood once so far since the 80s..not really bifl

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Snailspaced OP t1_itd8uk5 wrote

The all aluminum and carbon fibre model was 200k

(Wood rots. 30 bucks of plywood and a couple hours in in the late 90s and it was back in order

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Soft_Use229 t1_iteplgm wrote

$200,000?! Odd how completely refurbishing something with i

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