If they are anywhere near sharp/ish, use the butchers' trick of honing them on the back edge of another knife. This renews the edge easily, and when it doesn't work, it's time to go to the stone. :wink:
Hello John,,,that took me back about 30 years when I did some building maintenance work for a local butcher,,I used to watch as the butchers honed their knives on the back of another knife.
Hanging on the wall, by a bit of string was a steel or two which they used now and again with that "flick flacking" motion that can only come from experience.
I recall that every couple of weeks or so a tinker type (that can"t be PC) visited on a converted bicycle which had a sandstone? wheel at the rear at which he sat backwards and reground some of the butchers knives, yes, he pedalled backwards.
At the end of one job, Jim the butcher spotted me eyeing the sharpness of some of the knives and gathered a few which he gave to me and which are still serving well although they are not sharpened on a steel, I got one of those fangly sharpeners!
Jim is now dead and gone along with old matey with the converted bike but the knives are still in use.
Sorry,, I drifted off,, when the thread is about knife sharpening,,,,