Very Sturdy But Cute Hose Guards

Kim
by Kim
3 Materials
$50
45 Minutes
Easy
When I pull my hoses around a corner, invariably it drags right through my flowers and rips some out. To solve this problem I bought cheap plastic hose guards at the hardware store. Hubby hit them with the mower and several of them broke. So I went back to said hardware store and bought the expensive iron ones. Very cute but the screw-in part rusted through in one season. UGH! So I made these. After I collected all my supplies, they took about 45 minutes to make, including the time it took my handy husband to cut the pipe for me and including the time it took to pound ten of them into the ground.
I bought glass doorknobs at Home Depot for $8/pair. (I forgot to take a pic with them still in the package.) I made 10 hose guards, so I needed 5 packages ($40 total).
I bought long, galvanized bolts with the same threading as the inside of the doorknob, and screwed them in. These were $1 each.
The doorknob-bolt combo fit down inside a 3/4" galvanized pipe, which my husband cut for me, to 15" each. The pipe we had on hand, but if you were to buy it, it is about $15 for a 60" one, which yields 4 pieces. I wanted them long enough to pound into the ground far enough that the mower won't push them out of plumb. I plan to leave the pipes in the ground year-round, and take the doorknob-bolt combo in for winter and set them back out in the spring.
I pounded the pipes into the dirt with my husband's heavy brass mallet, so it did all the work for me, and didn't smash the top of the pipe in. This was very easy, six or seven hits for each pipe. 15 minutes total for ten hose guards.
Drop the doorknob-bolt in and stand back and admire. (Now I can drag my hoses out of the basement and start the real work. Hahaha!!) My cost was $5 each, or $50 for ten cute hose guards. If you had to buy your pipe, they would come out to about $9 each. These seem a little pricy, but this is actually about the same as the more expensive metal hardware store ones which rusted through their weakest place in just one summer. But these are mostly galvanized, so I have high hopes that they will last a long time if I take the doorknob part inside in the winter.
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  • Sharon Swanson Sharon Swanson on May 23, 2019

    I love them. Would copper pipes work? I realize they’re expensive but I think they would age beautifully. And I live in Southern California so probably wouldn’t need to take them out in winter. Great idea, btw.

  • Jean Jean on May 24, 2019

    What about using vox pipes? Would that be cheaper?

  • Patty V. Patty V. on Jun 30, 2019

    Would PVC pipe work for this project?

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  • Em Em on May 29, 2020

    I have a bin full of old door knobs. LOVE this idea. Thanks for sharing.

  • Sande Sande on Jun 12, 2022

    Great idea! I do have a bucket of old door knobs, & some old but good looking metal solar light spikes. I made 2 of them within a couple minutes. $0-cost. Glad I found this project. My flowers are safe now too! My neighbors will be happy if I share your idea.

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