This invention involves a gardening tool used as a rake where the tines of the rake are removably affixed to a bridge element. In the preferred embodiment circumferential banding clamps are used in conjunction with a sinuous wave shaped tines made of spring steel to affix the tines to the bridge of the gardening tool.
A gardening tool similar to a rake and having a handle portion, a bridge supporting means and a flexible comb element with a cover. The tool provides a flexible response to uneven terrain and offers an increased ability to gather and remove earthen debris. The tool may be used as a scooping means as well as a gathering tool.
A garden tool having a handle connected to a comb element which is provided with a sinuous serpentine plurality of projecting lobes constructed from a single continuous member of elastic material with the working section supported by and attached to the handle only at the ends of the element, the comb element being characterized by elastic and resilient response when applied to the earth in gardening activities.
"Trolley" Arm Bow Attachment For Lofting An Arrow Above Its Line Of Sight To A Target
An arm is pivotally mounted to a limb of a bow and has a pulley that engages the aft side of the bowstring when the bowstring is drawn. The arm is pivotally connected at a pivot axis to the upper limb of the bow at a position spaced from the upper end of the limb and is rotatable to extend aft of the limb. A pulley axle rotatably mounts the pulley to the arm at a position spaced from the pivot axis by a distance that permits the pulley to be positioned aft of the bowstring and the outer peripheral surface of the pulley to engage the bowstring when the bowstring is drawn. The purpose of the trolley arm is to loft an arrow shot from the bow so that its actual trajectory is above the line of sight of the archer to a target when the bowstring is drawn.