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The best garden hoses for frustration-free watering
Believe it or not, the right garden hose can make or break your gardening experience. Getting a garden hose that’s too short limits you from being able to water all your plants, while dragging around a hose that’s too long can be cumbersome. Material matters too. It’s important to get a garden hose that’s durable enough to survive throughout the seasons. The material also needs to be thick enough to resist punctures, but also not feel too heavy in hand.
We considered all of this and more when picking the best garden hoses of 2024. All of our top picks will provide a comfortable, hassle-free watering experience and are customer-loved to boot. What’s more, most of them are on sale.
Best garden hoses of 2024
Check out our picks for the best garden hoses for frustration-free watering.
Best overall garden hose: Flexzilla garden hose
This neon green garden hose from Flexzilla has more than 64,200 five-star ratings on Amazon. (Who knew a garden hose could be that popular?) The garden hose was designed to be lightweight in hand, kink-free, leak-free and durable enough to survive outside year-round, no matter how harsh the weather gets.
We like that it comes in a variety of sizes, which isn’t too common when it comes to garden hoses. Sizes available include 3, 5, 10, 25, 50, 75 and 100 feet. Purchase the 50-foot model now and you can save 43% off your purchase.
The Flexzilla garden hose has a 4.4-star rating on Amazon. One reviewer wrote, “I’ve owned and tried a lot of different hoses and by far this is the best one I have ever had. Very flexible, easy to roll up, does not get hard and stiff like some hoses. Five stars!”
Another customer wrote, “Love the quality and that it is drinking-water safe. Very bright color stands out in the garden, as it keeps me cutting it with the lawn mower or the tiller. Very kink-resistant as well.”
Best metal garden hose: AsSeenOnTV Bionic steel garden hose
The best way to ensure your garden hose doesn’t get punctured is to get one that’s metal. This garden hose from Wayfair is made of stainless steel which should hold up quite well outside all year The hose is rust- and corrosion-resistant and was made to be kink-free. And although made of steel, it will feel light in hand (the same way that stainless steel mixing bowls are lightweight).
There are four sizes available, including 25, 50, 75 and 100 feet. If you get the 50-foot option though, you can score this hose for 53% off, saving you $53 on your purchase.
The AsSeenOnTV Bionic steel garden hose has a 4.7-star rating on Wayfair. One reviewer wrote, “Love this hose. Very easy to install, use and it is great to reel back up. No kinks and has great water pressure. Loved the first one so much that I bought a second one.”
Another customer said, “This has been the perfect hose! Very durable yet lightweight and easy to move! I love that it never kinks!! Highly recommend!!”
Best rubber garden hose: Continental premium commercial-grade rubber black water hose
In addition to stainless steel, rubber is one of the most durable materials you can use for water hoses. Rubber can handle all different types of inclement weather, and is so strong that it would take considerable effort to damage due to the material’s thickness. It will be heavier in hand, but the quality is worth the extra heft. The hose also features crush-resistant brass fittings as well, taking its strength to a whole other level.
Given all that this product has to offer, it’s no surprise that this hose is top-rated on Home Depot. One reviewer wrote, “Where I live, the sun can burn up a cheap garden hose in a matter of hours, literally. Solid thick rubber hose with solid brass fittings and O-rings. I’ve owned one of these for two years and like it so much that I just bought another. Very good quality for the money.”
Another customer said, “I bought it one-and-a-half years ago. Kept out on the concrete walk area surrounding the pool and paver patio in almost full sun at all times. Florida climate. Don’t use a cart reel. Gets dragged often and so far not a single leak. All previous hoses haven’t last this long. Going to buy another…”
Best affordable garden hose: Teknor Apex Kink Control Plus garden hose
If you’re not comfortable, or ready, to spend nearly $50 or more on a garden hose, get this affordable option from Amazon. The Teknor Apex Plus is made of vinyl, which while not as durable as rubber or stainless steel, will still get the job done. Just make sure to handle the hose with greater care to ensure longevity. Still, the garden hose was designed to be kink-free and comes with crush-proof hardware.
The Teknor Apex Kink Control Plus garden hose has a 4.3-star rating on Amazon. One reviewer wrote, “I have been gardening for 50 years now. This is by far the best hose I ever owned. If it kinks, it is super easy to unlink. It’s soft, pliable, easy to handle, easy to roll back into storage. When my front garden hose goes, it will be replaced with another of these.”
Another customer said, “Most kink-free hose I’ve ever had. Remarkable–absolutely worth the money.”
Best retractable garden hose: Vego Garden watering plastic retractable wall hose reel
Don’t want to deal with manually wrapping up and storing your hose? We get that. If that’s the case, splurge on a retractable hose reel. This one from Wayfair offers variety in terms of installation, allowing you to mount it on a wall, the floor or the ground. The hose will lock at your desired length, and depending on how you choose to mount it, you can rotate it between 180 to 360 degrees.
The set comes with the hose, reel and two spray nozzles, which will save you a couple of shopping trips that you’d otherwise need to go on to get accessories. If you get this today, you’ll be able to save 33% off your purchase.
The Vego Garden watering plastic retractable hose reel has a 4.8-star rating on Wayfair. One reviewer wrote, “Very easy to install and works great. Keeps my hose off the ground and makes storage so much easier. The hose does get heavy as you pull it further out, but I still think it’s better than a traditional hose. I should have gotten this sooner!!”
Another customer said, “This is the second retractable hose reel I have purchased and Vego is by far the better option. This reel is very attractive on our house and functions smoothly. I will definitely buy again in the future!”
CBS News
Photographing the rooms of kids killed in school shootings
An unmade bed
A library book 12 years overdue
The next day’s outfit
Notes to her future self
Click on the door to enter
CBS News
How do you make a portrait of a child who isn’t there? Photographer Lou Bopp found a way, but it wasn’t easy.
In early 2018, I was deplaning after an 18-hour flight when Steve Hartman called. He had an idea: to photograph the still-intact bedrooms of kids who had been killed in school shootings.
It’s a headful. And six years later, I still don’t have an “elevator pitch” for the project — but then, I don’t often talk about this project. It is by far the most difficult I have ever worked on.
When Steve, my friend of about 25 years, asked me if I would like to be involved, I said yes without hesitation — even though I didn’t think we would get any families to agree. There is no way that I would have said no to partnering with him on this.
Emotionally, I was not sure how I would get through it. Within a few months I was on my way to Parkland, Florida. Alone. I’m not sure that I realized that I would be on my own.
But here I was. An on-location commercial photographer who focuses on people and pets to create compelling, honest, textural and connective moments for large brands, per my LinkedIn professional profile, on a project where there is no one to take photos of — for the most brutal of reasons.
How do you make a portrait of a child who is not there?
In each of these children’s rooms — the most sacred of places for these families — there was the sense that the child had just been there, and was coming right back. It was as if they’d just left their room like that when they went to school in the morning and were returning in the afternoon.
I wanted to capture that essence.
Most kids’ bedrooms are their very own special places, and these were no different. I looked everywhere, without touching anything. I photographed inside trash cans, under beds, behind desks. Their personalities shone through in the smallest of details — hair ties on a doorknob, a toothpaste tube left uncapped, a ripped ticket for a school event — allowing me to uncover glimpses as to who they were.
But there was an emotional challenge in addition to that creative one. Over the course of more than six years, we visited with many families around the country. The parents I spoke with seemed grateful that I was there. But each time I received a call or text from Steve about a new family, my heart sank.
It meant another family had lost a child.
I find it unfathomable that children being killed at school is even an issue. It makes no sense. It’s impossible to process. The night prior to each one of the family visits, I didn’t sleep. And I knew I wouldn’t going into the project. It’s not a self-fulfilling prophecy. It is nerves. And empathy. And sorrow. And fear.
In my notes from early on in the project, back in 2018, writing in seat 6H on the flight back from Nairobi, I reflected on the emotional task ahead.
“This is going to be one of the most difficult things ever, emotionally, for me, and not just work related. As I read my research documents, I get visibly emotional,” I wrote, noting my gratitude that the dark cabin prevented the other passengers from seeing me.
The prospect brought my own fears to the fore, both for myself — “I can’t help thinking about Rose,” my daughter, “and what if. I’ve lost sleep over envisioning the what-ifs well before Parkland” — and about and for meeting the families in the project: “When I read about April & Phillip and Lori’s plight, I somehow, for some reason put myself in their emotional position even though that is impossible, I have no idea, it’s beyond comprehension, I do not know what they feel. I do not know what I am going to say to them, I’m scared beyond belief. And alone.”
But just days later, I was photographing the first assignment for the project: Alyssa Alhadeff’s room. She was just 14 years old when she walked out of that room to head to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. I was shaky meeting the family friend who greeted me at the house. Her daughter was Alyssa’s best friend, and a photo of the two girls was on the table.
According to my notes, “The room was a beautiful teenager’s messy room. My emotions were kept in check the way that they usually are; By hiding behind the camera. I removed my shoes before entering. My heart was pounding and it reverberated through my body and soul, I felt like I was in one of the most sacred and special places on Earth. I was so careful not to touch anything.”
I left feeling ready to explode in sadness and anger.
Later that day, I photographed Carmen Schentrup’s room. Her younger sister had survived the Parkland shooting, but 16-year-old Carmen was killed in her AP Psychology class. Meeting her parents, April and Phillip, was what I was most scared of.
“I feel so much pain and compassion for them and I don’t want to say the wrong thing, drop cliches etc.,” I wrote at the time. “I spoke to Steve for guidance. He said, just be you. That’s all I can do. Just be me. He was right, those three words helped carry me through this entire project. Just be me.”
April let me in, and I worked quickly, only meeting Phillip as I was leaving. “The conversation felt like we all three were just trying to hold it together. I cannot imagine what they are going through, my heart hurts for them. This was / is such a painful project, and reconciling it will be impossible.
“I think about how anything can happen at any time to any of us. Literally. You never know,” I wrote.
After only about 16 hours on the ground in Florida, I was done with the first portion. I felt the project was a must, but I also dreaded the next call from Steve about the next family. I didn’t know when that call would come — many years later, or the very next day, possibly never.
But last month, we — and the documentary crew that filmed us working — completed this project. While I haven’t seen it yet, I know Steve’s piece won’t be a typical Steve Hartman segment. How could it be? I know he struggled too, and we both have spent a lot of time processing this.
I remember one August evening, I was devastated as I left the home of one of the families. Within minutes, I passed an ice cream shop crowded with other families — seemingly carefree, full of joy and laughter. The juxtaposition, mere minutes apart, cracked my soul.
I hope some way, somehow, this project can facilitate change — the only possible positive outcome for this I could comprehend. After the news cycle ends, these families will still be living with an incomprehensible nightmare.
CBS News
Standing on the threshold of grief, documenting the bedrooms of kids killed in school shootings
I never wanted to be this kind of reporter, knocking on the door of someone who lost a child in a school shooting. And yet there I stood, knocking, nonetheless.
I found myself here, standing on the threshold of grief across the country, after years of pent-up frustration. By 2018, America’s school shooting epidemic had taken a toll on me. There were so many that the news coverage felt like a treadmill. It seemed to me the country had grown numb and lost its empathy for the victims and the families. I wanted to do something.
For help, I reached out to Lou Bopp, one of the best still photographers in the country. But he said he had never faced a challenge quite like this: “to take a portrait of a person who’s not there.”
On March 27, 2023, Chad and Jada Scruggs lost their daughter, Hallie, in the Covenant School shooting in Nashville. She was 9 years old, the youngest of four, and their only daughter.
Looking back at photos of Hallie, Chad recalled how she loved sports and had “more stitches than any of her brothers.”
“It was just a lot of fun having a daughter,” Jada said.
“We had a chance to have her for 9 and a half years, and that was far better than not having her at all,” Chad said.
But their goodbye isn’t quite complete. They’re still living with her bedroom.
Over the past six years, eight families from five school shootings invited us into these sacred spaces, allowing Americans to see what it’s like to live with an empty child’s bedroom.
We traveled to Uvalde, Texas, where a gunman killed 19 children and two teachers at Robb Elementary School, including 9-year-old Jackie Cazares.
Jackie’s parents Javier and Gloria say people are always telling them that they can’t imagine what they’re going through. But they say we need to imagine, and that’s why they invited us in.
“It just makes everything more real for the public, for the world,” Gloria said. “Her room completely just speaks of who she was.”
In Jackie’s room, we saw the chocolate she saved for a day that never came, evidence of the dream vacation she never got to take, and the pajamas she never wore again.
It struck us how many of the rooms remained virtually untouched, years after the shooting.
Frank and Nancy Blackwell lost their 14-year-old son Dominic in the Saugus High School tragedy near Los Angeles. That was 2019, but inside his room, it felt like it was yesterday.
“We just decided to keep everything as it was from when he last went to school that day,” Frank said. “He didn’t prepare his room to be photographed. He didn’t put away his stuffed animals because he was worried about who might see it. He woke up, he got dressed, and he left to go to school. And he thought he was coming back. And we all expected him to come back.”
So many rooms wait for a child that will never return.
Charlotte Bacon was murdered in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012, six weeks after Halloween. Her room holds the last library book the 6-year-old checked out, now 12 years overdue.
Luke Hoyer, 15, was killed in Parkland, Florida, on Valentine’s Day in 2018. When we visited his home, his bed was just as he left it.
Alyssa Alhadeff, 14, was also killed in the Parkland shooting. The whirlwind that was her room had fallen still.
Carmen Schentrup was yet another Parkland victim. The watch she got for her 16th birthday still ticks, but the motivational sayings that filled her room resonate no more.
The decision to either keep a room as it was or pack it up and repurpose it tortures many parents.
Bryan and Cindy Muhlberger lost their 15-year-old daughter, Gracie, in the Saugus shooting. They told us they often talk about what to do with her room.
“Because when I do go in there, I feel her presence,” Cindy told us.
Bryan wondered, “And so when that time comes that the room is not there, does she go away?”
I didn’t realize what an albatross the rooms are for some families.
“I will just say I have a pretty confusing relationship with [Hallie’s] room now,” Chad said. It’s extremely painful, but there’s a lot of moments where you want to be sad — because the sadness is a part of connecting with her.”
Hallie’s room also brings them smiles, too, Chad and Jada told us as they showed us a kitty cat hoodie that Hallie wore all the time.
The rooms really are a rainbow of emotion, all at once tender as a lullaby and shocking as a crime scene. Clues gather dust, leading us past all the places these kids had been up until that very moment when everything stopped so suddenly that there wasn’t even time to close the lid on the toothpaste tube.
In the end, we took more than 10,000 photographs. These parents hope that at least one of these pictures will stick with you, that you will forever carry a piece of their pain and use that heartache to stem the tide of all these empty rooms.