A Month-by-Month Guide to the Best Time to Buy Everything

16 Dec.,2024

 

A Month-by-Month Guide to the Best Time to Buy Everything

Based on data from price-tracking sites DealNews and FatWallet, Money created this month-by-month guide to snagging the best deals on everything. Want to see every month in one place? Download the whole list as a handy chart. And check out these other smart strategies for timing your purchases.

Goto 1 to know more.

January

What to buy:

TVs and electronics, bedding, linens, cookware, fitness equipment

Sample deal:

35% off brand-name HDTVs at Best Buy

February

What to buy:

Winter apparel and accessories, appliances, furniture, housewares

Sample deal:

60% off mattresses at J.C. Penney

March

What to buy:

Non-Apple smartphones, running shoes, team apparel

Sample deal:

53% off running shoes at joesnewbalance outlet.com

April

What to buy:

Home, garden, and auto supplies; spring clothing

Sample deal:

40% off Craftsman tools at Sears

May

What to buy:

Home furnishings, home goods

Sample deal:

60% off clearance at Williams-Sonoma decor

June

What to buy:

Tools and home improvement materials

Sample deal:

57% off tools at Home Depot

July

What to buy:

Swimwear, summer entertaining goods, air conditioners

Sample deal:

37% off LG air ­conditioners at Amazon

August

What to buy:

Laptops, summer clothing

Sample deal:

$100 off Apple laptops

September

What to buy:

Home furnishings, outdoor and patio goods, last-generation iPhones/iPads

Sample deal:

50% off Strathmore patio furniture at Amazon

October

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What to buy:

Denim and fall fashion, camping gear, sports equipment

Sample deal:

50% off Levi&#;s jeans at Macy&#;s

November

What to buy:

Videogames, consumer electronics

Sample deal:

Two-for-one PS4 and Xbox games at Best Buy

December

What to buy:

Gift cards, toys

Sample deal:

73% off close-out toys at Target

Barebones Garden Tool Buying Guide

How to use a hand trowel

Trowels are incredibly handy for digging in small spaces. The narrow, slightly scooped blade is perfect for installing bedding plants, moving soil, and digging holes for seedlings. A trowel is an essential tool in every gardener's arsenal. 

 

How to use a square hoe

The square hoe will quickly become one of the most used tools in your kit. It&#;s a wonderful trencher, hiller, and soil-patter. Use the square hoe to dig a long trench (where seeds or transplants will be planted) in a row-like fashion. Hill up the soil over the seeds or around the seedling roots. Then use the flat side of the hoe to gently pat the soil down around the plant, stabilizing the seeds and roots. Potato plants need to be continuously covered by a hill of soil throughout the season. When tending to potato crops, use the edge of the hoe to scoop and hill soil in a mound over the plant. The square hoe is an excellent tool for moving soil to maintain garden bed borders and rows.

How to use a triangle hoe

Just like a square hoe, the triangle hoe has a variety of uses for all types of gardeners. This is a great tool to turn to when you need to do precision planting and weeding. The sharp points make it ideal for sowing seeds in small narrow trenches close to each other. They are also excellent at uprooting stubborn weeds and patches of grass growing in beds. The triangle shape is ideal when working in tight spaces where you don&#;t want to disturb the soil or roots of nearby plants.

How to use a cultivator

Think of a cultivator as a stronger alternative to using fingers when you get the urge to rake, stir, and mix the soil with your hands. The prongs are ideal for stirring in fertilizer and compost, raking rocky soil to remove weeds, or raking soil and mulch smooth over the surface. In parts of the garden where soil is dense and clay-like, use the cultivator to aerate the soil by pushing the points of the prongs as deep as you can before adding compost to amend the soil.

How to use a Japanese weeding hoe

A weeding hoe is a less-known gardening implement, but after a few uses, it quickly holds a special place in one&#;s garden tool kit. Multiple times throughout the year, garden beds can get covered in a layer of wind-blown seeds that sprout up all at once and form a green carpet of tiny weed seedlings. This process can be incredibly tedious and discouraging if picking each weed by hand.

Enter the Japanese weeding hoe. The razor-sharp edge slides under the first inch of the soil and slices small weeds at the root level. A single pass with the blade uproots and severs instantly. Additionally, sharpening is possible. Sharpening the blade enables it to also be used as a scythe when cutting handfuls of lavender stems and tall grasses.

How to use a dandelion weeding fork

The strong taproots of dandelions and similarly growing plants are famously stubborn. The notched blade of the weeding fork penetrates the soil and leverages up tap roots. This tool is a lifesaver when dealing with strong plants, whether you're removing them from unwanted places in lawns or foraging in the wild for medicinal roots.

How to use a garden scoop

Every gardener needs a lovely little scoop shovel like this. It&#;s perfect for scooping soil into potted plants and moving fertilizer from the bag into the soil. A nice deep scoop delivers the right amount of material (and keeps soil and fertilizer from spilling everywhere).

How to use a pruner

Pruners provide scissor-like cutting for tender green-tissued stems such as flower stalks. These also perform well on denser woody-tissued stems such as rosemary, lavender, and sage. They cut clean and close without crushing plant tissue, which helps prevent disease from infesting damaged areas after a fresh pruning.

How to use a hori hori

Japanese for &#;dig dig&#;, the Hori Hori Ultimate and Hori Hori Classic should be at-the-ready every day in the garden. From a serrated blade that breaks open bags to a hook that cuts twine and opens bottles, and finally, to a blade point that effortlessly digs in the soil, it's a tool in near constant use. Use the hori hori to excavate plants without damaging roots when transplanting. Use the measurement markings to dig a hole at the right depth for planting and uproot weeds in extremely tight spaces without damaging surrounding roots. You&#;ll never run out of uses for this priceless tool.

How To Use Gardening Scissors

A good pair of Gardening Scissors are ideal for harvesting herbs, snipping flower stems, and any other trimming. Its ambidextrous grip and wide handles accommodate any size of hand, gloved or otherwise - and its elegant but utilitarian appearance makes it a delightful choice for all gardeners. Plus, it&#;s available in two different blade sizes to get the job done right.

How to use Shears

Gardening Shears have similar uses to gardening scissors - but they pack a little extra muscle for woodier stems or larger herb bundles. Plus, these shears come in two different configurations (one for trimming and one for pruning), with precision details that make each job a breeze.

How To Use A Stirrup Hand Hoe

The Stirrup Hand Hoe uses a wiggling action to cut the roots of weeds just below the surface of the soil. It's ideal for working between garden rows as well as aerating the soil in your beds in an efficient, quick manner.

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