Features
- 6 PCS KIDS GARDEN TOOLS: Toddler gardening tools set include Shovel, Rake, Hoe, Leaf Rake, kids custom gloves and a spray bottle (3 morphological transformations). Children's custom gloves are perfect for protecting their hands from injury while gardening activities!
- QUALITY MATERIAL& SAFE: Our Handles are made of imported pine wood, the garden tools head is supported by solid iron pieces and sprayed with environmental protection. these tools are sturdy enough for actual digging, and kids to play outdoors well, such gardens, farms, yard, snow, beach etc
- ERGONOMIC DESIGN FOR CHILDREN: The length of the children's gardening shovel set is 70cm(27.5in), which is a regular size suitable for most children. The handle is equipped with hanging holes and a middle connector that can be detached for easy suspension and storage. Note: the connector needs to rotate to the bottom without leaving gaps during use
- SKILLS & EDUCATIONAL: Kids Yard Tools help improve hands-on skills. It also helps kids to develop a sense of nature, learn about plants while they grow flowers or help parents do garden work. Perfect to turn gardening into family fun and get kids out and away from electronics screens
- THE BEST GIFT - Duckura Kids Gardening Tools Set creates the most ideal gift for your kids, such as birthday gifts, halloween, christmas or Yard gifts, the gardening set for kids is the perfect little gardening enthusiast’s gift! It's also perfect outdoor toys for boys girls age 3 4 5 6 7 8+ years old
Specifications
Color | Green |
Size | 36.5*19.5*11.5 cm |
Unit Count | 6 |
Related Tools
A six-piece children's gardening set with a shovel, rake, hoe, leaf rake, gloves and a spray bottle for outdoor digging, raking, weeding and watering. Handles are made from pine wood with iron tool heads coated with a protective finish; the shovel is approximately 70 cm (27.5 in) long and features a detachable middle connector and hanging holes for storage.
Duckura Kids Gardening Tools Set - 7pcs Garden Tool for Kids with Shovel, Rake, Hoe, Leaf Rake, Outdoor Summer Yard Lawn Digging Weed Toys, Christmas Birthday Gifts for Boys Girls Age 3 4 5 Years Old Review
A kid-sized set that works like the real thing
Saturday mornings in our yard usually mean a small helper shadowing me from bed to bed, asking for “his tools.” The Duckura kids gardening set has become our go-to kit for those sessions. It’s a six-piece bundle—shovel, rake, hoe, leaf rake, gloves, and a spray bottle—with pine wood handles and metal heads that are sized for children but capable of actual garden work.
I’m generally wary of toy tools because they frustrate kids by being flimsy or purely decorative. This set feels different: it’s clearly scaled down, but it’s also built to be used, not just pretend.
Build quality and safety
The handles are pine, with a smooth finish that arrived free of splinters. The tool heads are iron with a protective coating. Out of the box, everything felt solidly joined, with clean rivets and no misalignment where the metal meets the wood. These are real tools, though, and that cuts both ways.
On the plus side, the shovel actually bites into loosened soil, the rake can pull debris, and the hoe will break crusted top layers in raised beds. On the caution side, they’re metal. Edges aren’t razor-sharp, but they are capable of scratching skin if used carelessly. I kept the shovel and hoe in my control at first, handing over the leaf rake and rake to my preschooler until he understood the rules. The included gloves help; they’re light-duty, but they add a layer of protection and make the ritual of getting ready to “work” feel special.
If you’re expecting soft, plastic edges, this set isn’t that. It’s better for supervised, intentional use than for free-for-all backyard romps.
Size and ergonomics
Each long-handled tool is roughly 70 cm (about 27.5 inches). That length hits a sweet spot for kids around ages 3 to 6. My little one (on the shorter end) can work without having to lift the handle too high, and the diameter of the handle is easy to grip. For older kids—say seven or eight—the length starts to feel short, and you’ll see some hunching if they’re doing more than a few minutes of raking. Weight-wise, nothing felt fatiguing; the balance point sits close enough to the head that kids can guide the tools without fighting them.
Setup and storage
Assembly boils down to joining the two handle sections via a middle connector and threading them snugly into the tool head. This connector is detachable, which is handy for storage. Make sure you twist everything fully—no gaps should be visible at the connector. The first time we used the shovel, the connector backed off slightly and introduced a bit of wobble; a quick retighten solved it. Since then, I give each tool a twist before we head out.
Each handle has a hanging hole, which is a small but appreciated detail. When the tools are split into shorter sections, they tuck neatly into a bin in our garage. The spray bottle stows with our watering gear.
In the yard: how each tool performs
- Shovel: The star of the set. It moves real soil—especially in prepared beds, compost, or sandbox sand. In heavy clay or rocky patches, you’ll want to pre-loosen with an adult tool or set expectations that this is for scooping, not prying.
- Rake: Great for pulling leaves off grass or smoothing mulch. It’s small enough that kids can control it, and the tines don’t gouge.
- Leaf rake: Softer and wider, perfect for corralling lightweight debris without tearing seedlings.
- Hoe: Best for breaking light crust or drawing shallow furrows in loose soil. If used to pry stones, it can flex—this is not the tool for heavy leverage.
- Gloves: Thin and stretchy, sized for small hands. They fit my preschooler well; a five-year-old can still wear them, but older kids may find them snug. Not thorn-proof; think dirt and scuffs, not rose pruning.
- Spray bottle: Surprisingly good. The nozzle adjusts between three spray patterns, and the pump action is smooth enough for little hands. Watering is always the fan favorite chore, and this makes it feel official.
We also took the set to the beach; the shovel and rakes are excellent in sand. I wouldn’t leave the metal heads in saltwater or wet sand for long, though—rinse promptly to avoid corrosion.
Durability and maintenance
After a few weeks of spring use—wet soil, repeated rinses, and one rainy night accidentally left on the patio—the paint on the leading edge of the shovel showed minor chipping, and I saw a few spots of surface rust. Nothing catastrophic, and easily addressed with a quick scrub and dry. The hoe’s edge showed similar wear, which is expected with metal tools used by enthusiastic kids.
Two suggestions from my experience to extend life:
- Rinse and dry the heads after each use, especially after contact with wet soil.
- Wipe the metal with a light oil (even a food-safe mineral oil) now and then. It takes seconds and slows rust significantly.
The handles themselves have held up well. The finish is smooth, and while pine isn’t indestructible, we haven’t had splintering or swelling. Keep them out of standing water, and they’ll be fine. As for the threaded connector, it’s a convenient design—just re-tighten occasionally and avoid torquing the tools sideways under load.
Safety, supervision, and age fit
With real metal comes the responsibility to supervise, especially for younger kids. I’d call this set ideal for ages 3–6 with guidance, and still useful for older children who don’t mind the shorter reach. We established simple rules—tools stay below the waist, we wear gloves when digging, and we park the shovel on the ground before we walk away. It sounds formal, but it turns into habit quickly and keeps the experience positive.
What could be better
- Coating longevity: The protective finish does its job initially, but it chips on the business edges with regular use. A tougher coating, or even a brushed finish with a rust-resistant treatment, would push durability up a notch.
- Hoe strength: It’s fine for crust and light furrows, but it flexes if used as a lever. A slightly thicker neck or shorter head might resist bending better while staying kid-safe.
- Glove sizing: An additional larger pair would help the set grow with kids. As-is, you’ll outgrow the included gloves before the tools.
- Care guidance: A simple maintenance card (rinse, dry, oil) would help caregivers keep the set in shape, especially for families new to metal tools.
Value and who it’s for
If you’ve only bought plastic “garden toys” before, the Duckura kids gardening set will feel like a step change. The tools actually work, which means kids can participate meaningfully—moving soil, raking leaves, tending to seedlings, or simply watering with the spray bottle. It’s ideal for families who want kids outside, hands-on, and learning to care for a space without fighting with flimsy gear.
If your yard is mostly heavy clay or you expect these to dig through gravel, you’ll want to frame tasks accordingly or keep an adult tool nearby for the tough bits. And if your child is very young or particularly exuberant, start with the rakes and the bottle before introducing the shovel and hoe.
Final recommendation
I recommend the Duckura kids gardening set. It hits the right balance: real materials and kid-friendly sizing, enough sturdiness for genuine garden chores, and just enough thoughtful design—the detachable connector and hanging holes—to make daily use easy. You’ll need to supervise, rinse, and occasionally re-tighten and oil. In return, you get a set that turns “helping in the garden” from pretend play into an authentic, confidence-building activity. For families seeking durable, functional tools for young gardeners, this is a smart pick.
Project Ideas
Business
Kids Garden Party Service
Offer themed mobile garden parties for birthdays and playgroups. Use the 6-piece sets for each child and run 45–60 minute activities: plant-a-pot, seed art, and a pollinator lesson. Charge per child and include add-ons like custom gloves, photos, and takeaway kits. Partner with event planners, local parks and preschools to scale. Create packages for indoors (tabletop planting) and outdoors (full garden experience).
Subscription Grow-Box for Little Gardeners
Create a monthly subscription box for ages 3–8 that includes seeds, child-friendly instruction cards, a craft (paint-a-pot or plant tag), and a rental or discounted purchase option for the tool set. Each month centers on a theme (pollinators, veggies, herbs) and includes lesson prompts for parents. Use video micro-lessons and community social groups to increase customer retention and upsell seasonal kits.
Wholesale Kits for Schools & Daycares
Package the sets with curriculum-aligned lesson plans and plant packs for preschools and after-school programs. Offer tiered pricing for bulk orders and optional staff training workshops (online or on-site) on how to run safe gardening sessions. Emphasize hands-on learning outcomes: fine motor skills, science basics, and healthy eating. Provide branded storage hooks and classroom signage as value adds.
Personalization & Gift Bundles
Sell customized sets with engraved handles, color-coordinated gloves, or themed decals (dinosaurs, fairies). Create seasonal gift bundles (holiday, Mother's Day, Earth Day) that include a small planter, seeds, and a personalized instruction card. Market through Etsy, Shopify, and local craft markets. Use local partnerships with nurseries and gift shops to create exclusive bundles and increase margins.
Creative
Mini Pollinator Patch
Use the child-safe shovel, rake and spray bottle to create a small pollinator-friendly plot (3–6 sq ft). Teach kids to dig shallow beds, mix compost into soil and plant easy flowers like calendula, alyssum, and borage. Use the gloves for seed planting and the leaf rake to keep the bed tidy. Add a painted rock marker and a laminated ID card that the child can decorate to learn pollinator names. Variation: make a balcony/window-box version using the hoe to loosen potting mix.
Garden Explorer Sensory Path
Turn a yard strip into a sensory path where children help dig and arrange different textures: sand, pea gravel, mulch, and grass plugs. The set’s rake and shovel let kids move materials safely; the spray bottle helps settle dust and water plantings. Incorporate scent stations (mint, lemon balm) and touch stations (lamb's ear, thyme). This project builds motor skills and can be made into a seasonal activity with leaf piles in autumn or snow patting in winter.
Stepping-Stone Memory Project
After using the tools to prepare a work area, have kids press handprints or leaf imprints into quick-setting stepping-stone mix in pre-made molds. Use the gloves while mixing and the shovel for scooping. Decorate with pressed seeds, glass beads, or painted designs once cured. These stones make durable garden markers or gifts for grandparents and teach measuring, mixing and basic tool safety.
Storytime Garden Theater
Create a tiny story-garden where children plant props from favorite tales—beanstalk for Jack, carrots for Peter Rabbit. Use the set to build tiny raised beds, dig tunnels for sensory play, and water scenes with the spray bottle. Combine with simple handmade puppets and a low bench for outdoor story sessions. Great for combining literacy and gardening: each plant becomes a storytelling prompt as it grows.