Wagtail
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2013
- Messages
- 13,430
- Location
- St Helens, Tasmania, Australia
- Tractor
- JD 4105 / JD Z355E (48" deck)
There, and quite a few other places too, Mate.In the UK... maybe.
There, and quite a few other places too, Mate.In the UK... maybe.
That sounds like a useful tool. By your description, I have seen somewhat similar shovels in the UK and Commonwealth countries, but not here. I had forgotten about them, and now I'm thinking they would be great for digging out my rounded driveway gutters. Hmmmm. Thanks!I had a ditch shovel that was made like the mfgr split a thin 8" pipe lengthwise, welded an arch in the middle with a place for a handle on the top, and a standard long handle there. This arch was made to swivel and set to any angle so the user could either pull or push the " shovel along to make a round-bottom ditch.
I had used it at my FIL's place while getting it ready to sell and left it there.
Someone else liked it so took it.
I've never been able to find another or any reference to it on the internet.
It was great for cleaning out small ditches.
Anyone ever heard of something like that "shovel"?
That sounds like a crumb shovel. It's used to remove the crumbs at the bottom of the ditch following an 8" wide trencher digging a deep trench for water, gas, sewer, etc.I had a ditch shovel that was made like the mfgr split a thin 8" pipe lengthwise, welded an arch in the middle with a place for a handle on the top, and a standard long handle there. This arch was made to swivel and set to any angle so the user could either pull or push the " shovel along to make a round-bottom ditch.
I had used it at my FIL's place while getting it ready to sell and left it there.
Someone else liked it so took it.
I've never been able to find another or any reference to it on the internet.
It was great for cleaning out small ditches.
Anyone ever heard of something like that "shovel"?
A handyman "let" me use his one summer in 1979 when I built my garage with a frostline footing dug with an 8" trencher.@bigtiller Love it! I had never seen one before, and boy could I have used one on more than a few projects...
All the best, Peter
My dad has that shovel on the right. He calls it a "diego" shovel. Not sure if that was the correct name or brand name. It could have also been a slang term. Used in narrow trenching. I have bought the one on the left years ago. Jon![]()
All the best,
Peter
Yep, That's it! Thanks, I've searched the internet for several years without success.That sounds like a crumb shovel. It's used to remove the crumbs at the bottom of the ditch following an 8" wide trencher digging a deep trench for water, gas, sewer, etc.
like this?
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The one on the left reminds me of a long handled 'pelican pick'.Or in the UK,
![]()
All the best,
Peter
My dad has that shovel on the right. He calls it a "diego" shovel. Not sure if that was the correct name or brand name. It could have also been a slang term.
I have only known it as a spade.My dad has that shovel on the right. He calls it a "diego" shovel. Not sure if that was the correct name or brand name. It could have also been a slang term. Used in narrow trenching.