We saw some ads about a weed pulling tool and decided to give it a try. I'll give my impressions of the tool at the end.
Introducing the Fiskar Weed Puller. It's the strange, orange contraption on the ground next to the hand shovel. It has an orange handle, metal teeth, and a black lever. It ran for about $25 at Lowe's so it's relatively inexpensive as far as tools go. A suggestion to improve the tool would be to lengthen the handle as I do find that it is pretty short for a person my height.
To operate, you stick the metal teeth into the heart of a weed brush, like so. You can step on the black lever to push the teeth deeper into the ground. After the teeth are lodged into the ground, you pull the handle in the direction of the black lever. The teeth will clamp around the root system of the weed (in theory) and your pulling motion will pull the entire root system out of the ground.
Here is the end result. You'll notice that it pulls up a lot of dirt along with the roots. This will leave a noticeable hole in the ground, but you can always shake off the roots and replace the dirt if you want to. Also, the orange portion of the handle in the bottom right corner of the picture is actually a mechanism that you an use to push the weeds out of the teeth after they have been pulled. Just like a pump shotty. Pump and you're ready to go again.
Final impressions: The tool is good for pulling weeds that grow in patches or bushes. It is not so good at pulling weeds that grow in stalks. The reason is because it is harder to target the teeth to pull out a stalky weed than it is to target a bushy or patchy weed.
Another problem occurs if you have a sprinkler or drip system installed in your lawn. Weeds often congregate around your sprinkler or drip pipes because that is where the most moisture is. If you find that to be the case, be careful while using the weed puller. The teeth aren't sharp so they won't cut your pipe, but they are strong enough to latch on and pull up your sprinkler pipe if you're not careful.
Overall, the weed puller would be great if my weeds were more patchy or bushy rather than stalky, and if I didn't have a sprinkler system. Definitely check out the type of weeds you have and their locations before deciding whether to buy this tool.