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Stay sharp in your yard

Here's how to properly sharpen different garden tools for peak performance.

By Lee Reich, Associated Perss
Published December 29, 2007


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Winter is prime gardening time in Florida. So if you haven't sharpened your tools recently, now's the time.

Here are some tips to get the most mileage from your garden tools.

Choose your instrument

Take apart tools like pruning shears, hedge shears and loppers to make their blades more accessible for sharpening. Look at any blade and you'll see that it's beveled on either one or both sides: one side for the blades of hoes, mowers and hedge shears; both sides for knives and axes.

Anvil-type pruning shears or loppers have one sharp blade that meets the flat surface of an opposing blade. Only that one sharp blade is sharpened - on both sides.

For bypass-style pruners, with one sharp blade sliding past the other, one or both of their blades is sharpened - but on one side only.

Get started

Remove any nicks before you begin sharpening any blade. Use either an electric table grinder or a file to dissolve the nick into the surrounding metal. Filing in toward a sharpened edge is most effective, but be careful you don't push so far forward that you slide your hand into the blade.

When doing this initial grinding or rough filing, try to reproduce the original bevel of the blade. Put a narrower angle on the blades of cutting tools, such as pruning shears, than on the blades of earth-cutting tools such as hoes, spades and shovels.

Finishing touches

The grinding wheel followed by the file, or the file alone, may be all that's needed to sharpen your shovel and hoe, but sharper tools need dressing with a whetstone.

That whetstone should indeed be wet, with water or oil, to float away metal particles as you sharpen.

Lay the beveled side of the blade flat on the stone, then angle the blade up until its working edge comes down to just touch the surface of the stone.

Now slide the blade forward, all the time holding it firmly against the stone, as if you're trying to slice a thin layer off the surface of the stone.

Know when to say when

With some tools it's either necessary or more convenient to replace the blades rather than sharpen them. The sharp blade of anvil-type pruning shears or loppers, once nicked, can never again seat itself squarely against the opposing flat blade, so it needs replacement.

Bow saw blades are inexpensive and easily replaced.

[Last modified December 28, 2007, 16:28:56]


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