Bishy Barnabee’s Cottage Garden

Hand Tools

The smaller pieces every gardener reaches for first

34 products

Hand Tools — your questions answered

What is the difference between hand tools and garden tools?

Hand tools are the smaller, finer pieces you use kneeling or sitting — trowels, hand forks, weeders, dibbers, snips. Larger garden tools are the long-handled ones for standing work — spades, forks, rakes, hoes, lawn tools. Most gardeners use both categories, but if space is tight, a quality set of hand tools serves a surprising range of tasks.

Which hand tools should I buy first?

Start with a forged hand trowel and a matching hand fork. Add a sharp pair of snips (separate from secateurs, for harvesting and softer cuts), and a small weeding tool like a Japanese hori-hori or a dandelion grubber. These four pieces will handle 80% of typical garden work.

Do hand tools need sharpening?

Cutting hand tools — snips, hori-hori knives, weeders with cutting edges — benefit from sharpening once or twice a year. A small whetstone or diamond file does the job; you don't need professional grinding for garden tools. Trowels and hand forks don't need sharpening but should be cleaned and oiled like anything else.

Are wooden-handled tools worth the extra cost?

For most gardeners, yes. Hardwood (typically ash or hickory) handles absorb shock better than plastic, age beautifully, and can be replaced if they ever break — unlike plastic handles which are usually discarded with the tool. A well-made wooden-handled hand tool can outlast its owner.