A Grub hoe or grubber
Chopping cotton isn't really chopping cotton. When you are "chopping cotton" you are chopping down weeds that are growing in the rows that the cotton is planted in. Johnson grass and stuff like that.
As I remember, they're similar to a garden hoe except the metal part that does the chopping is about twice has high/long. Also, they were made such that instead of the handle going into a shallow metal cone and ending inside it, they stuck through the metal chopping part.
a hoe is "une binette" in French. A sturdy and heavy hoe could also be called 'une houe' (same pronouciation as the English word)
Thistles Centre was created in 1977.
They Burn the Thistles was created in 1972.
Kenora Thistles was created in 1885.
A hoe is a simple agricultural implement consisting of a shaft to which a thin broad metal plate is affixed at a right angle. It differs from a spade which has a metal plate fixed in line with the shaft. A hoe is used for breaking up the soil, for making furrows, and for weeding. The typical motion of hoeing is a chopping motion. A similar tool is the adze, which is used for shaping wood.
hoe hoe hoe hoe hoe hoe hoe hoe hoe hoe
Overgrown with thistles; as, thistly ground., Fig.: Resembling a thistle or thistles; sharp; pricking.
Shamrocks and Thistles - 2009 SUSPENDED was released on: USA: 2014
Shamrocks and Thistles - 2009 SUSPENDED is rated/received certificates of: USA:R
Santa says hoe hoe hoe! ha