About this product
Full description
If your hostas have ever been reduced to lace overnight, or your dahlia shoots vanished by the time you came back from the kitchen, you've already met the shrub rake's natural enemy. Slugs and snails overwinter and shelter in the damp leaf litter that accumulates under shrubs and low planting — and clearing that litter regularly is one of the gentlest, most effective things a gardener can do to reduce their numbers.
This is the right tool for the job. The Burgon & Ball Stainless Steel Shrub Rake is a compact hand rake designed precisely for the spaces a full-sized rake can't reach — beneath shrubs, between low planting, in the tight corners where leaves and debris quietly accumulate.
From Burgon & Ball, the Sheffield toolmaker who've been making garden tools since 1730. RHS-endorsed, backed by a lifetime guarantee. Supplied to us through our partners at AllotMate, who curate proper, well-made tools for gardeners and allotmenteers who'd rather buy once.
Why a shrub rake matters more than people realise
Most gardeners think of leaf clearing as a tidiness job. It's actually one of the most useful pieces of integrated pest management you can do without any chemicals at all:
- Slugs and snails shelter in leaf litter — particularly the damp, shaded litter under shrubs and dense planting. Removing it through autumn and winter dramatically reduces the local population
- Fungal disease overwinters in fallen leaves — especially black spot on roses and rust on hollyhocks. Clearing the leaves removes the spores
- Damp accumulated debris promotes rot at the crown of perennials and the base of shrubs
- Hidden weeds get a head start in undisturbed leaf litter — clearing it exposes seedlings before they take hold
- Air circulation improves around the base of plants when the ground beneath them is open rather than smothered
For anyone gardening organically — or wanting to reduce slug-pellet use — regular shrub-raking through autumn and into spring is the single most effective non-chemical intervention you can make.
What makes this one work
The compact size and considered construction matter for the specific job:
- Compact head — fits into tight spaces between low branches, low planting and shrubs, where a full-sized rake simply doesn't reach
- Flat stainless steel tines — gather leaves rather than stabbing them. Gentler on surrounding plants, more efficient at collecting
- Balanced hardwood handle — comfortable for the slow, methodical work of properly clearing under planting
- Polished stainless steel — soil and leaves release cleanly, the head stays bright over years of use, no rusting issues
- Leather hanging cord — keeps the rake stored properly off damp surfaces between uses
The flat-tine design is particularly important. Pointed-tine rakes can damage roots, lift mulch and snag emerging perennials in spring. Flat tines do the gathering work without the collateral damage.
When you'll use it
- Autumn leaf fall — the main season, working through the steady drift of leaves from October to December
- Late-winter tidy — clearing the last of the previous year's leaves before spring growth starts
- Spring inspection — gentle clearing under hostas, peonies and emerging perennials to expose any sheltering slugs before they get going
- Around roses — clearing fallen black-spot leaves through the season to reduce reinfection
- Under hedges and at fence lines — places leaves naturally accumulate and full-sized rakes can't reach
Specifications
- Tines: Flat stainless steel — gathering rather than stabbing
- Head: Compact, designed for tight spaces under shrubs and low planting
- Handle: Hardwood, balanced for control and comfort
- Storage: Strong leather hanging cord
- Endorsement: Royal Horticultural Society approved
- Guarantee: Lifetime
- Made by: Burgon & Ball, Sheffield (since 1730)
- Supplied through: AllotMate
Looking after it
- Wipe clean after each use, particularly after damp leaf clearing
- Dry properly before hanging — stainless steel resists rust well but appreciates not being stored damp
- The hardwood handle can be lightly oiled with linseed oil once or twice a year to keep it conditioned
- Hang from the leather cord rather than leaving it on the floor — keeps the rake off damp surfaces and ready for next time
Treated this way, this is another lifetime-guarantee Burgon & Ball tool that you'll keep for decades.
As a gift
Particularly thoughtful for:
- An organic gardener — the slug-management angle is a quiet acknowledgement of how they like to garden
- A rose grower — black-spot clearing matters more than most people realise, and a proper rake makes it efficient
- A hosta or dahlia enthusiast — anyone whose treasures get nibbled overnight will appreciate the help
- A gardener with mature shrubs — the under-shrub spaces are exactly what this rake is for
- Pair with our other Burgon & Ball hand tools — the Stainless Steel Dibber, Mid-Handled Fork, or BoronGreen Hand Trowel — for a fuller cottage gardener's hand-tool gift
About Burgon & Ball
Burgon & Ball have been making garden tools in Sheffield since 1730, drawing on the city's centuries-old expertise in steel. They hold the official Royal Horticultural Society endorsement — a designation given to tools that meet exacting standards for performance, durability and design. We're proud to stock their range; British-made tools at this quality are increasingly rare.
A small thought: the small undervalued tools often turn out to be the most useful. A shrub rake on a misty November morning, slowly working through the fallen leaves under the hydrangeas, is the kind of unglamorous job that quietly does more for next year's garden than any number of spring planting sessions. The slugs that aren't there in May are because of the leaves that weren't there in November.
What's included
Care and use
- Dry before hanging
- Lightly oil the hardwood handle (linseed) once or twice a year
- Hang from the leather cord - keeps the rake off damp surfaces
Pairs well with
Other products from the potting shed that work alongside this one.




