Wheelbarrows!

Stenners

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I've had my purple plastic wheelbarrow for years and years and yesterday it all fell apart as totally rusted out and now un useable to I need a get new one!

Does anyone have any good recommendations? Just for 1 horse but I have a slope in my field so nothing majorly heavy to push up hill when full of poo!
 

Stenners

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I rate the Haemmerlin ones. They're not cheap but they're easy to handle, carry more than your average barrow, last a long time and you can get them in pretty colours. The puncture proof wheel is more expensive but worth it I think.
I like these but my husband said it doesn't have a "proper wheel" it's too plasticky so thought it wouldn't last.
 

Stenners

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I rate the Haemmerlin ones. They're not cheap but they're easy to handle, carry more than your average barrow, last a long time and you can get them in pretty colours. The puncture proof wheel is more expensive but worth it I think.
Do you have the 110L or the 90L?
 

paddy555

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I like these but my husband said it doesn't have a "proper wheel" it's too plasticky so thought it wouldn't last.

it is a proper wheel. :)

I put these puncture proof wheels on one of my wheel barrows and they are very strong and do last. Their only downside is that the barrow is not as nice to push over uneven ground as the ones with ordinary tyres. If/when I have to buy a new wheel barrow I shall specify puncture proof tyres even though they are more expensive.

We have a lot of equipment eg trolleys etc that we have changed the original wheels to puncture proof ones
 

Stenners

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it is a proper wheel. :)

I put these puncture proof wheels on one of my wheel barrows and they are very strong and do last. Their only downside is that the barrow is not as nice to push over uneven ground as the ones with ordinary tyres. If/when I have to buy a new wheel barrow I shall specify puncture proof tyres even though they are more expensive.

We have a lot of equipment eg trolleys etc that we have changed the original wheels to puncture proof ones
Fab thanks I will have a look into these then!
 

Annagain

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I like these but my husband said it doesn't have a "proper wheel" it's too plasticky so thought it wouldn't last.
Mine has lasted at least 5 years, probably a lot longer. I know it was when my friend's horse was still alive as she bought one on my advice after I bought one. He's been dead 5 years. I had the normal wheel at first and switched it to the puncture proof one after, funnily enough, a puncture.

Do you have the 110L or the 90L?

The 90L. It's plenty for me. I can muck out 4 stables into it (poo only as they're on wood pellets so I don't d the wet every day) if I'm careful. It's more than big enough for the two I do regularly. I carry their hay in it too (with an old feed bag as a liner) and easily get enough for two or even three sometimes if it's quite wet so doesn't fly away on there.
 

Shilasdair

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I envied a field neighbour who had one of those expensive big wheelbarrows with two wheels - until she went away, and I looked after her horses for a couple of weeks.
Her field was on quite a slope - the wheely took off with me, dragging me down to the bottom of the hill, and then tried to catapult me into a bed of nettles, using it's evil handles.
So - I would recommend Haemerlin normal wheeled ones, too. :D
 

Stenners

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I envied a field neighbour who had one of those expensive big wheelbarrows with two wheels - until she went away, and I looked after her horses for a couple of weeks.
Her field was on quite a slope - the wheely took off with me, dragging me down to the bottom of the hill, and then tried to catapult me into a bed of nettles, using it's evil handles.
So - I would recommend Haemerlin normal wheeled ones, too. :D
These 2 wheeled ones are the devil!!
 

MissTyc

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I also have recently from a Haemerlin, 90L with puncture proof tyre. So far, so good. It carries less than my previous barrow which was "deeper" but that makes it easier to push up the muck heap so I don't mind an extra journey and my back hurts a bit less now haha ...
 

paddy555

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I envied a field neighbour who had one of those expensive big wheelbarrows with two wheels - until she went away, and I looked after her horses for a couple of weeks.
Her field was on quite a slope - the wheely took off with me, dragging me down to the bottom of the hill, and then tried to catapult me into a bed of nettles, using it's evil handles.

clearly a lack of training of that barrow by your neighbour. Alternatively it was just trying it on with you. :D:D:D


both of my lads are 2 wheeled barrows, we were very strict with early training and they behave perfectly. ;)
 

poiuytrewq

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I have a 2 wheeler but don’t really use it for field stuff, just mucking out, my muck heap is on concrete and gets pushed up by machine so it’s easy enough.
I also have my favourite little barrow which is a Haemmerlin but not the small 90l garden type it’s the deeper 120 k which I was going to put a link too but can’t find it!
Yesterday one of the farm lads drove into it with a tractor and I thought killed it, genuinely gutted ?
They managed to pull it all straight again with ropes and a forklift ? it’s almost good as new!
 

rextherobber

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I've just bought a Haemmerlin and its great really light but seems sturdy, my tip is go with a solid wheel
I absolutely haye the solid wheels, you cannot get them through muddy gateways and in the summer, the slightest rut makes the poo jump back out of the barrow. Have 2 ordinary wheels, then you can just replace it straight away and carry on using it while the garage repairs the punctured one. I like Fort barrows ( just to be different!)
 

Esmae

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The orange B&Q jobs are as good as anything. We've had ours years now and it's still working daily. Nice and light to use as well.
 

chaps89

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I like these but my husband said it doesn't have a "proper wheel" it's too plasticky so thought it wouldn't last.
They have 2 types of solid wheel - one which is thin and plastic and bounces everywhere because it’s too solid so there’s no give for bumpy ground. Or a heavy duty solid rubber one that is much better.

I had a heammerlin, changed from a regular wheelbarrow wheel/tyre to the solid rubber one. That outlived that barrow, is on its second haemmerlin which is now coming to the end of its life (I really must be less lazy and not overload it!) and so I suspect will go onto haemmerlin barrow #3 in due course
 

Burnttoast

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I envied a field neighbour who had one of those expensive big wheelbarrows with two wheels - until she went away, and I looked after her horses for a couple of weeks.
Her field was on quite a slope - the wheely took off with me, dragging me down to the bottom of the hill, and then tried to catapult me into a bed of nettles, using it's evil handles.
So - I would recommend Haemerlin normal wheeled ones, too. :D
Haven't laughed so much in ages ? ? ? thanks for that!
 

Shilasdair

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clearly a lack of training of that barrow by your neighbour. Alternatively it was just trying it on with you. :D:D:D
both of my lads are 2 wheeled barrows, we were very strict with early training and they behave perfectly. ;)

:mad:
It started off obediently in halt as I filled it up with poo - then when I tried to go down the hill it bolted with me; despite my considerable ballast it gained momentum until it tried to 'off me'. I swear you can still see my boot marks...
 

ILuvCowparsely

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I like these but my husband said it doesn't have a "proper wheel" it's too plasticky so thought it wouldn't last.
I find them really good

we have 4 Haemmerline plastic ones and one metal ones
We have
lime green
red
pink
dark green ( lame)
purple
yellow

I would go for the vibrante and the go https://www.haemmerlin.co.uk/products/vibrante/go/

Though must say the pick up when full to the brim was much easier to push and felt less weighty as is narrow so weight more central. We had it years ago https://www.haemmerlin.co.uk/products/vibrante/pickup/

All mine are normal tyres and when punctured i just take the whole wheelie down the tyre place and they fix it job done. The solid tyres would be too bouncy and jerky of rutty fields.
 
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mariew

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I bought a gardenia over 10 years ago and it's still going. I liked that it was a little bigger than your average b&q wheelbarrow. I did swap the tyre out for a.non puncture one eventually. They are pricey but have lasted a long while.
 

OrangeAndLemon

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i have some from these guys… they have non pneumatic tyres are huge but very light.

I have some one wheel and some 2 wheel and both are good for different jobs

https://wheel-barrows-direct.co.uk/
I bought myself a 160l, 2 wheeled one after test driving many of the ones the liveries have here on the yard. I found the 200l just too heavy when full to the brim. When poo picking the field, I borrow my friends one wheeled Hammerlin because it's much easier to get that to the field than my two wheeled heavy barrow.
 
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