SKU: 16302572950

Burgon & Ball RHS BoronGreen Mid-Handled Trowel

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Description

Burgon & Ball RHS BoronGreen Mid-Handled TrowelA hand trowel is the most used tool in the garden but using one means bending, kneeling, and reaching, session after session, and that's exactly what starts to tell on a back over the years. The mid handled trowel solves the problem with elegant simplicity: the same wide, deep, hard working blade, on a longer handle that brings the work up towards you. It's the planting and scooping tool you can use standing a little straighter, leaning a little less,

A hand trowel is the most-used tool in the garden — but using one means bending, kneeling, and reaching, session after session, and that's exactly what starts to tell on a back over the years. The mid-handled trowel solves the problem with elegant simplicity: the same wide, deep, hard-working blade, on a longer handle that brings the work up towards you. It's the planting and scooping tool you can use standing a little straighter, leaning a little less, and gardening for a good deal longer in comfort.

The Burgon & Ball RHS BoronGreen Mid-Handled Trowel is built around that extra reach. At around 47cm long it lets you plant and scoop at the back of a deep border, or work the far side of a raised bed, without clambering in or over-stretching — and it brings the soil up to a far more comfortable working height for anyone who finds repeated bending and kneeling hard going. For raised-bed gardeners, and for anyone gardening with a tender back, hip, or knee, that extra length makes a real, daily difference. The head keeps the trowel's essentials: a wide, deep dish that carries the maximum load with every scoop, and sharpened edges that slice cleanly into the soil for digging and planting.

It comes from the Sheffield toolmaker's most innovative range, and BoronGreen is genuinely something new. The blade is forged not from ordinary carbon steel but from boron steel, the same high-performance alloy used in the automotive and agricultural industries where toughness really matters. Add boron to carbon steel and you get a tool that's stronger, more durable, and holds its edge longer — all without any extra weight, which matters all the more on a longer-handled tool. The neck is precision-forged to the perfect angle for comfortable, ergonomic working.

What makes the range special, though, is that this performance comes with a real environmental conscience. The BoronGreen steel is made from 80% recycled steel — believed to be a first for UK garden tools — and the handle is turned from FSC-certified white ash, finished with a tough green powder coating on the head to resist rust. It's the rare tool that's better made and better for the planet, which is a combination we're always glad to find.

It carries the official Royal Horticultural Society endorsement and a 25-year guarantee — the kind of backing that tells you everything about how long the makers expect it to last. And there's a lovely finishing touch: a dark wood inlay set into the end of the handle, etched with the ampersand from the Burgon & Ball name, with a twisted paper hanging cord for keeping it tidy on a shed hook.

What it's for

The mid-handled trowel brings the reach of a longer tool to the everyday jobs of a hand trowel:

  • Planting at the back of borders — setting in plants and bulbs you'd otherwise have to climb into the bed to reach
  • Raised-bed gardening — planting and scooping across the whole bed comfortably from the path
  • Gardening with less bending — the extra length brings the work up towards you, easing the strain on back, hips, and knees
  • Digging planting holes — the sharpened, deep-dish head sinks easily into the soil
  • Scooping and filling — moving compost and soil, and topping up pots and containers, without leaning right over
  • Working in compost or feed — digging organic matter or fertiliser into beds and planting holes

It pairs naturally with the matching BoronGreen mid-handled fork — the two reach tools that, between them, handle planting, scooping, weeding, and loosening without the constant stooping. And it sits beautifully alongside the BoronGreen hand tools for closer work: the same range, the same quality, the same reassuring guarantee.

Looking after it

Boron steel and FSC ash, properly cared for, make a tool that genuinely lasts decades — the 25-year guarantee is a clue:

  • Knock off the soil and wipe the blade clean after use, especially in wet conditions
  • An occasional wipe of oil on the metal keeps it in good order, though the green powder coating already resists rust well
  • Hang it up to store using the twisted paper cord, keeping it off a damp shed floor
  • Oil the ash handle lightly once or twice a year with linseed oil to keep the wood nourished and handsome

About Burgon & Ball

Burgon & Ball have been making garden tools in Sheffield since 1730 — nearly three centuries of steel-working heritage — and today they hold the official Royal Horticultural Society endorsement and lead the way in innovative garden tools. The BoronGreen range is a good example of that: traditional Sheffield tool-making expertise applied to a genuinely modern, sustainable material. We're proud to stock it.

About AllotMate

This mid-handled trowel is supplied to us through our partners at AllotMate, who curate proper, well-made tools and equipment for gardeners and allotmenteers who'd rather buy once. We work with them through a direct fulfilment arrangement, which means your order ships from their warehouse straight to your door — the same Burgon & Ball tool, slightly faster delivery, and consistent stock.

Specifications

  • Head: boron steel (80% recycled), wide deep dish with sharpened edges, green powder-coated for rust resistance
  • Neck: precision-forged to an ergonomic working angle
  • Handle: mid-length FSC-certified white ash with dark wood inlay and Burgon & Ball ampersand
  • Hanging cord: twisted paper
  • Dimensions: approximately 47cm long × 7.5cm wide (head)
  • Reach: mid-length for borders and raised beds with less bending
  • Endorsement: Royal Horticultural Society approved
  • Guarantee: 25 years
  • Made by: Burgon & Ball, Sheffield (est. 1730)
  • Supplied through: AllotMate

The mid-handled tools are the ones gardeners tend to discover late and then wonder how they ever managed without — the small change of reach that turns an awkward stretch into an easy, comfortable job, and keeps you gardening happily for longer.

Shipping Notes
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SKU: 16302572950

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M
Matt
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
great guide to hiking (or biking) the Camino de Santiago trails
Format: Hardcover
Spain is one of my favorite European destinations, and while I have not done the Camino de Santiago yet, it is an area that is definitely on my radar for an upcoming trip. This book focuses on the trails and the regions they pass through, and gives quite a bit of detail and background to successfully plan a trip there. Now, I am not religious, and I am purely interested in the historical and cultural aspects of the region, not looking to have a spiritual experience. Fortunately the book is written in such a way that it is respectful to those who *are* looking for the latter, but it doesn't focus on it as much as I feared that it might. So it'll be useful to me in planning my travels. The one issue that I have about this book, which I *almost* took a star off of my rating for, is that the book is a little *too* sturdy. My big complaint with the regular DK travel guides in recent years is that they've gone to cheaper paper, cheaper covers, and cheaper binding than they used to use, to the point that they feel almost fragile to me. This book, ironically made as a guide for hiking and biking trips, has the opposite problem... It's hardcover, and it's kind of bulky. I mean, that's great, normally I'd be in favor of that... But if I'm going to be hiking for days or weeks (some of the trails in this book take over three weeks to complete according to the book), the last thing I'm going to want to do is carry this thing around. It's a little baffling that they'd choose this of all books to make hardcover. Honestly, though, I am probably not hiking (at least not for a multi-week trail... maybe for a few days in there, for the rest I'll take a train or rent a car), which is why I decided not to remove a star. But if you will be hiking, it may be something you'll want to consider.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2025
D
Deshrek
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Very beautiful book
Format: Hardcover
It’s not only a tour guide but rather a detail record of the Camino de Santiago history book and the pictures inside this book look so beautiful you may only find in specialized photo albums.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on January 14, 2026
T
The Indie Reviewer
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
Wonderful resource
Format: Hardcover
This spectacular pilgrim guide title Walking the Camino de Santiago, is an excellent production that provides helpful guidance on anything a pilgrim would need to know prior to making this well-known pilgrimage via some not-so-well-known routes and tips. This book stands out in excellence with its simplicity and yet thoroughness in providing chapters on the possible eight pilgrimage routes with history on each one. It provides tips and practical information on things to check out as part of the geographical and cultural landmarks, food, accommodations, etc. The illustrations and photographs in this book make it a stunning work of art and resource. Anyone considering doing this pilgrimage/ retreat would benefit from this book. If nothing else, this book can be gifted to someone considering doing the Camino, and it would make an excellent coffee table conversation starter.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2025
D
David S Ross
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 3
Small hardcover: get the Kindle version instead
Format: Hardcover
This is a small format hardcover with 6.5 x 8.5 inch pages. As an armchair traveler I was hoping for more illustrations and I also found the small print, generally small photos and illustrations and the small captions on the illustrations quite frustrating. I would actually recommend the Kindle version instead since it is less expensive and allows you to better expand the illustrations to get a much better view. There’s a good description of eight of the more popular Caminos including the best known “French Way” which stretches almost 500 miles from the French border area to Santiago de Compostole in Western Spain. Learning about the history of the pilgrimage routes which stretches back more than 1000 years was interesting and the maps provide a good general sense of the different routes. The day by day accounts tend to be a bit boring without larger illustrations. This is a decent introduction for someone like me who only thought there was a single Camino de Santiago. Still I wish I had the Kindle version instead of the print version in this case.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2026
P
P. Alley
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 4
Great Book for Choosing a Camino de Santiago Route with Distinctive Descriptions and Photos
Format: Hardcover
This DK travel guide is a little unusual in that it does not primarily focus on the things to see, places to eat, and places to stay, although brief suggestions are included. Instead, the book describes eight main routes of the Camino de Santiago in 2-to-3-day sections, plus some alternate routes and extensions, touching on the scenery and the history of the walk. Suggested cafes and albergues (pilgrim hostels) are relegated to small paragraphs that resemble captions. Arguably there are days when there won’t be much to see or do, just long meditative walks between farm fields or vinyards; also, the rigors of the walk may leave pilgrims too tired to explore much. As the guide says, “you’re not a vacationer, you’re a pilgrim.” Of course, there are helpful tips included, particularly in the back of the book where culture, etiquette, transportation, and training are discussed, but also some trail-specific advice throughout. For example, some routes like the Portuguese route allow for returning to the same hotel for several nights by utilizing trains to access different sections of the route. The distinctiveness of the various routes makes this a helpful book if you’re intrigued but not sure which of the routes would be right for you. You'll be left with a little more work to do to find contact information and seasonal operating hours for the listed places. The layout of the book features lots of pictures, as might be expected for a DK travel book, but the pages are not glossy and there are none of the cutaways and drawings which make DK books so recognizable. The book feels more like an engaging textbook than a typical travel guide. It seems to be an intentional decision not to carry paragraphs across pages, which gives the reader the opportunity to look at the pictures and captions before continuing. There are some artistic details like wavy-line swooshes that overlay the photos and unfortunately often make them look as though something is wrong with the print, but otherwise, the writing, design, and layout make the information very accessible.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 17, 2026

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