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Sterilizing Pruning Tools: Don’t Use Bleach

By Larry Hodgson

Most gardeners know that it’s important to disinfect pruning tools (pruning shears, saws, loppers, etc.) before moving on to another plant. And that, if you’re removing diseased branches, tools should likewise be sterilized between each cut as well. It is, in fact, very easy to transfer a disease from one plant to another or even from an infected part of a plant to a healthy part via contaminated tools.

And it is also wise to clean and disinfect pruning tools before putting them away for the winter.

However, contrary to popular belief, bleach is not the product of choice for sterilizing metal tools.

To give the devil it’s due, bleach will indeed kill microbes when applied to cutting tools. The problem is it has other less interesting effects.

In other words, use bleach for washing clothes and possibly, well diluted, for sterilizing pots, but keep it away from both plants and gardening tools.

Better Than Bleach

There are commercial liquids specifically designed to disinfect pruning tools and they work fine. Your local garden center almost certainly carries them. However, you probably already have perfectly good sterilizing products in your home right now and they will cost you much less.

The best and cheapest is probably rubbing alcohol (isopropyl alcohol). You can dip the tool in a small cup of it or wipe the blade with a cotton ball or cloth dipped in it. It cleans (it’s very good at removing sticky conifer sap) and sterilizes, yet is in no way corrosive. 

Hand sanitizers, readily available everywhere these days, cost a little more than isopropyl alcohol, but sterilize just as well. If you carry a bottle of sanitizer around with you anyway, look no further! You already have what you need!

Other readily available home products that sterilize well without harming tools include Lysol, Pine-Sol and Listerine. Use the original formula, not one of the multitudes of offshoot products of unconfirmed effectiveness.

But don’t use vinegar to clean and sterilize tools. Although you’ll see a cloth soaked in vinegar recommended a sterilizing for garden tools on Facebook and elsewhere on the Internet, it’s not a good choice. It simply doesn’t kill that many microbes, including some very harmful to plants, and therefore won’t give you the sterile tool you need. And it actually feeds some microbes!

Other Helpful Hints

Text based on an article originally published in this blog on December 14, 2015. 

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