Garden Tool Maintenance Leicester

Once you have chosen the right tools for your gardening tasks, keep them working well and prolong their life by taking good care of them. The article below offers some tips on how to do just that.

Linnaeus Nursery
0116 2255828
Cordelia Close
Leicester
Craighill Nurseries Ltd
0116 2707065
Craighill Road
Leicester
Buttercup & Daisychains Ltd
0116 2681123
350 Loughborough Road
Leicester
James Coles & Sons Nurseries Ltd
0116 2418394
The Nurseries
Leicester
Dominion Road Nursery & Florists
0116 2874981
171 Dominion Road
Leicester
Blunts Garden Supplies
0116 2539735
87 Crafton St East
Leicester
Humberstone Park Garden Centre Ltd
0116 2760700
41 Abbotsford Road
Leicester
D P Electronics
0116 2620200
Unit 11 Storey Street
Leicester
Thurmaston Garden & Floristry Centre
0116 2692541
600 Melton Road
Leicester
Ecob'S Garden Centre
0116 2883627
Horsewell Lane
Wigston
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Garden Tool Maintenance

Garden Tool Maintenance

Maintaining Your Tools

Once you have chosen the right tools for your gardening tasks, keep them working well and prolong their life by taking good care of them.

  • Make sure that you wipe or scrape off all soil and mud, grass clippings and plant sap from any tools you have used with a damp soft rag.
  • Wipe all tool handles with a damp cloth and finish off with a dry rag.
  • If sap or clippings have dried onto garden knives, secateur blades or shears, use an oily rag or pan scourer to loosen and remove the debris.
  • Prevent tools from rusting by oiling them when necessary. Store spade blades and fork tines into a bucket of oily sand and use an oily rag to wipe over all ordinary metal parts of your other tools. Stainless steel tools do not need oiling; simply wipe them with a damp cloth and dry with another.
  • Make sure that all bladed tools are closed before storing, securing them with the safety catch if they have one.
  • Periodically tighten the blade tension of shears; this will make them cut more efficiently and produce a better finish.
  • Keep blades sharp using a sharpening stone. Although most tools are easy to sharpen, you can also take them to a garden machinery shop or send them back to the manufacturer for re-sharpening. Replace blades that are badly blunted or damaged.
  • Store hand tools on a dry surface; tools left on floors may become damp, which will cause them to rust. Use a hessian tool bag, trug, basket or builder's bucket.
  • Consider hanging larger tools such as hoes and rakes from tool hooks; this will keep them up off ground, freeing up floor space and preventing them from becoming damp.

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