
Weeding Day Should Feel Like a Walk in the Yard.
Weeding is supposed to be the easy part — a slow stroll through your beds with a coffee in hand, watching the yard get cleaner with every pull.
Instead, it turns into a wrestling match with stubborn taproots, a back that quits before lunch, and a half-pulled dandelion that's already growing back next week.
The Homestead Weeder puts the easy back in. Stand up. Step down. Walk on.


Why 10,000+ Gardeners Made The Switch
The Gardener Who Stands All Season Long
No kneeling pad. No squatting. No knees grinding into hot pavement. The 45-inch handle lets you weed fully upright — even the beds against the back fence.
The Gardener Whose Back Stopped Aching
Most folks don't realize how much weeding wrecks the lower back until they spend a whole season without it. Step. Pivot. Walk. The weed leaves. Your back stays.
The Gardener Who Quit Spraying Chemicals
No Roundup. No glyphosate. No second-guessing about the dog rolling in the grass an hour later. Just a clean yard — root and all — and grandkids who can play on it the same day.
Real Gardeners. Real Results.
Pulled a taproot the length of my forearm
I bought this expecting the usual — a tool that works once and gives up. Wrong. First weed I tried was a dandelion that had been there for years. The whole root came out, dirt and all. My wife laughed when I held it up like a fish.
Daryl P.My back doesn't dread Saturday anymore
I'm 64. Used to lose an entire weekend recovering from one afternoon of weeding. Did the front bed last Saturday in 40 minutes and went out to dinner the same night. That alone is worth twice what I paid.
Marian L.Finally rid of Roundup in my garden
We've got two dogs and a toddler grandson who runs barefoot. I never felt right spraying the lawn but I never had a real alternative. Now I do. The thistles are gone and nobody had to wear shoes to play outside.
Carol W.Solid build. None of that hollow aluminum nonsense
I've gone through three weeders from the big-box store in the last six years. This one feels like it'll outlast me. The bamboo handle has weight to it. The steel head isn't going to bend. You can tell within two seconds of holding it.
Robert T.Knee surgery was last year. This is a gift.
Had my left knee replaced in May. Doctor said no kneeling for six months. I figured my garden was a lost cause this year. Then my daughter sent me this. I weeded the whole side yard standing up, knee never touched the ground. Cried a little, honestly.
Patricia S.Skeptical at first. Won me over in five pulls.
I figured this was another internet gardening gimmick. Bought one anyway because my wife was tired of hearing me complain. Five weeds in, I shut up. Ten in, I texted my brother to buy one. Twenty in, I quit my Saturday landscaper.
James M.The roots come out whole. That's the whole game.
Every other tool I've used snaps the stem and leaves the root in the dirt. Two weeks later, same weed, same spot. This one grabs the crown and lifts the whole thing out. Two months in, I haven't seen the same dandelion twice.
Eddie C.
Roots And All — Every Single Pull.
Most weeders snap the stalk and leave the taproot exactly where you don't want it. Two weeks later the weed is back, in the same spot, looking smug.
The Homestead Weeder's three hardened steel tines plunge deep into the crown of the plant and grip the entire root structure from every side. The whole specimen lifts out in one smooth motion — soil ball, taproot, secondary roots, the lot. The weed leaves. It doesn't come back.
Gardeners report removing 9 out of 10 weeds in a single pull — taproot included.
The Last Weeder You'll Ever Buy.
Most garden tools are designed to fail by year three. Hollow aluminum bends. Stamped tin dulls. Plastic cracks the first cold winter.
We built the Homestead Weeder the way our grandfathers built theirs — solid bamboo, hardened tempered steel, and a lifetime guarantee in case we got something wrong. Three pounds in the hand. Forty-five inches tall. Engineered to outlast the yard it'll clear.
Covered for life. If it bends, breaks, or rusts through — we send a new one. No questions.Why It's Built Different

01. Three Hardened Steel Tines
Three tempered steel tines — angled to drive deep into the soil and grip the crown of the weed from every side at once. Even the taproots that snap off in cheaper tools come out whole. Powder-coated to resist rust through seasons of wet ground and morning dew. Sharp enough to bite into compacted soil. Tough enough to lever out a twelve-year-old dandelion root.

02. Solid Bamboo Long Handle
Forty-five inches of solid bamboo. Light enough to swing around your beds for an hour without fatigue. Strong enough to lever out roots three feet deep. Bamboo absorbs shock the way aluminum never will — every pull feels controlled, never jarring. And it ages like a fine kitchen tool: darker, smoother, better with every season you put on it.

03. Foot-Pedal Lever System
Step. Pivot. Pull. The foot pedal does the work your back used to. One firm step drives the tines deep into the soil — no swinging, no stabbing, no muscling. The pivot does the rest, lifting the entire root out in a single smooth motion. Gardeners with bad knees, bad backs, recent surgeries — this is the design that lets you keep gardening.