It was a Saturday morning in March when Oliver Clarke stood on his patio in Guildford, feeling frustrated.
The paving stones were green with moss. Weeds were growing between every gap.
Last year’s pressure washer? Sitting in the garage weighing 16 kilos, with a cable that was too short and a leaking seal. Just setting it up would take 20 minutes.
“So I grabbed the garden hose,” Clarke recalls.
“And as always: plenty of water, but the dirt stayed put. Lots of flow, hardly any pressure, no real results.”
That day, he asked himself a question that changed everything:
What if the hose itself could generate enough pressure, without a motor, without electricity, and without all the hassle?