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Soil Knife: The All-in-One Garden Tool that Will Change Your Life

Drop everything! This will be your new go-to tool this year. A soil knife is a handy all-in-one tool that landscape professionals use. And if you haven’t tried it in the home garden yet, it’s going to blow your mind!

Have you ever used a soil knife? If you have, then you probably have an old bucket of dusty garden tools sitting in your shed because the soil knife replaces so many of them. Goodbye trowel! Goodbye weeder! Goodbye scissors! Goodbye saw! The soil knife replaces them all. You can use it to divide plants, plant bulbs, flowers, and herbs, dig out weeds, remove rocks, cut through roots, plant in pots, clean out cracks, cut twine and ties, and for so much more!

Using a soil knife in the garden to dig, weed, aerate, and more

This is definitely not new technology. It has evolved from the traditional hori hori knife used in Japan (“hori” means “to dig” in Japanese). The tool is made of a strong steel blade with a serrated edge on one side. It’s useful because the serrated edge acts as a saw, while the sharp side opposite the serrated edge allows for clean cuts. The knife can be used for digging, cutting roots, pruning, aeration, and much more. The modern versions sold today also come with depth markers along the side so you can quickly measure planting depth. With a soil knife by your side you’ll be quick to ditch the cumbersome bucket of hand tools that you used to drag around with you in the garden.

Digging and planting with a soil knife

SPONSORED CONTENT: This post was sponsored by A.M. Leonard’s Gardener’s Edge. All of the opinions that are shared in this post are my own. See the full disclosure policy here.

Be sure not to miss the giveaway at the end of this post as well. A.M. Leonard’s Gardener’s Edge has also generously agreed to give away three deluxe soil knife and sheath combos! 

Leonard Deluxe Soil Knife

The Leonard deluxe soil knife is manufactured from the highest quality, rust-resistant Swedish stainless steel. The blade is engineered to withstand over 300 lbs of pressure for a lifetime of use. The six-inch stainless steel blade has a tapered slicing edge, plus a sharp, deeply serrated side made for fast root cutting.

A soil knife with depth measurements along the blade

How to Use a Soil Knife

First things first, get yourself a sheath that clips onto your belt/pants or hip holster so that you can carry your soil knife around with you while gardening. This allows you to keep your hands free and grab it out of the sheath/holster when you see a weed or a branch that needs pruning.

Using a soil knife to aerate the roots of a potted plant

Weeding

The pointed tip of the soil knife makes it a great weeding tool. Simply use the soil knife to dig down into the soil and pop out the roots of the weed you are trying to remove. Its strong blade is able to get out even the toughest of weeds. And if there’s one that puts up a bit of a fight, simply use the serrated edge to cut it.

Digging

The shape of the soil knife is like a thin trowel, which makes it easy to dig holes for planting or transplanting in the garden. The shape and strength allows you to dig even in quite compacted soil. If you run into a root, the serrated edge will help clear a hole in no time.

Cutting

A soil knife is also the perfect shape for slicing open a bag of garden soil and cutting garden twine.

Seeding

The slender trowel shape is perfect for filling up small seedling pots with soil, whereas most trowels are too wide and the soil spills over the edges. A soil knife can also make great seedling lines in the garden bed so you can sow rows of seeds.

Pruning

The soil knife will quickly remove suckers from a tree or small branch. For larger, more precise pruning jobs, definitely make sure that you use your bypass pruners, but for a quick fix when you just have a stray branch or sucker to remove, a soil knife is your new best friend.

Aerating Roots

A soil knife is also great for breaking up a matted root ball in a plant that has been potted. Often when you buy a plant from the store or transplant something from a container the roots are tightly wound and need a little pruning to adapt to a larger pot or to the soil. Using a soil knife allows you to loosen up the root ball and spread out the roots, adding some much-needed aeration.

 

Giveaway!

This contest is now closed. Congratulations to our three winners: Cindy, Sharon, and Lisa Kristie!

Enter to win a Leonard Delux Soil Knife and Sheath Combo

More Garden Tools and How to Use Them

 

 

Comments

  1. This knife would be perfect to use in my garden. O sometimes use one of our knives f4om my kitchen so this knife is exactly what I need. Thanks so much for offering to give away some of them!

    Reply
  2. I do most of my gardening in large containers. with some being on legs and the soil at waist level. I can’t use long handled gardening implements, everything has to be a hand tool. The soil knife would be an especially useful tool for those containers. I am always looking for better methods and tools for gardening.

    Reply
  3. What a great tool! I would have loved using that in the garden today! It never fails if I go out to do one thing it leads to another. I found a big cluster of weeds on the way to plant my new bare root espalier apples and needed a knife to cut the bag off the roots – the ruler would have been great to measure the depth of planting. I think I made three trips back to the shed for various tools and even after tree planting would have loved using it to pop my little kale seedlings out of their trays! Sounds perfect!

    Reply
  4. This is a great all-around tool. I do use a handheld rack for doing some of the above gardening jobs. I sure would be able to use this! It would be a great addition to my gardening tools.

    Reply
  5. I subscribed a short time ago and love getting weekly tips and projects, so firstly, thank you for the effort you put into your blog. This gardening knife looks awesome with so many uses. Who wouldn’t love to clip this on their belt and use it all over the yard! I sometimes resort to a kitchen knife but it doesn’t dig well.

    Reply

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