Summary
What this review covers
The use is easy to understand: press the U-shaped pins through mesh, fabric, hose lines, or lightweight material so the setup stays anchored near the soil.
Pros
The upside
- The 120 count box gives a gardener plenty of pins for row covers, netting edges, drip lines, and fabric corners.
- The 6 inch U-shape is easy to press into soil around beds, paths, and container areas.
- The galvanized iron construction suits repeated outdoor setup and cleanup tasks.
Cons
The tradeoffs
- Firm or rocky soil may need a pilot hole or a slower push to keep the pin shape clean.
- The small silver staples deserve a dedicated storage spot after seasonal covers come off the beds.
Who it is for
Fit and feel
Good match:
This pack suits gardeners who use row covers, lightweight fabric, mesh, drip lines, and small outdoor materials that need clean hold-down points.
What to know:
Store the remaining staples in their box or a labeled bin. Small metal pins disappear quickly in soil, mulch, and shed corners without a regular home.
Where to check it
Check HongWay 120 Pack 6 Inch Garden Stakes
Open the current merchant listing if the buyer fit and tradeoffs still line up.
- Amazon opens the HongWay 120 pack 6 inch garden stakes product page.
Breakdown
Full review
Small pins that make covers behave
HongWay Garden Stakes are the humble hardware piece that often makes a row-cover setup feel complete. Once netting, fabric, or drip tubing is in place, these U-shaped pins help keep the edges close to the soil.
The 120 count box has a practical shed feel. A few pins can hold a short netting edge, while a longer bed can use a steady line of staples along the sides and corners.
Galvanized stakes for garden materials
Each staple is 6 inches long with an 11 gauge wire diameter, giving it enough presence for light landscape fabric, mesh, tarps, hoses, wire, and small garden materials. The beveled ends help the pin enter soil with a steady push.
The adjustable U-shape also helps when a material is slightly thick or when the soil needs a firmer angle at the edge of a bed.
Useful with mesh, hoops, and drip lines
These staples pair naturally with garden netting and low hoop tunnels. Hoops give the cover height, mesh gives the bed coverage, and staples keep the lower edge from lifting during watering or wind.
They also work around soaker hoses, drip lines, and path fabric, which makes the box useful beyond one seasonal pest setup.
Good match
This pack suits gardeners who use row covers, lightweight fabric, mesh, drip lines, and small outdoor materials that need clean hold-down points.
What to know
Store the remaining staples in their box or a labeled bin. Small metal pins disappear quickly in soil, mulch, and shed corners without a regular home.