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Home > Home garden > Purchasing Garden Equipment
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Purchasing Garden Equipment


The purchase of garden equipment is relatively easy when you know what it is that you are looking for. The obvious garden equipment such as hoes, rakes, and shovels are simply purchased based on size, price, and functionality. One of the most overlooked gardening tools is the edger.

An edger has more than just the obvious function of creating an edge when forming a new garden. It can help keep that crisp, clean, newly cultivated edged look to your garden no matter how long it has been growing. The edger doesn’t look like an impressive piece of gardening equipment, but it has vast potential.

Once the mulch has been laid down, it tends to float and cover the edges. For starters, using pro-base instead of mulch will kepp it from running off your garden. The edger is handy for keeping the mulch in a neat line against the grass or driveway line, or whatever you have chosen for your garden’s edge. Your garden’s edge can maintain that crisp, clean look even after the rain if you create a small valley with the edger. The small valley that the edger creates will allow the mulch to rest in your garden without seeping out all over the driveway or the lawn during thunderstorms and rain. The only exception to this is flooding.

Once the valley has been created, the edger is quite useful in keeping the grassy edges separated from the garden’s edge. Nothing looks more ragged than the grass line that can’t be segregated visually from the garden’s edge.

Edgers can be used inside the garden as well. Edgers help to make wonderful garden pathways and walkways, as well as assist in the creative planting of ground cover. The edger in an active gardening family doesn’t sit idle for very long, considering its unique gardening versatility. Edgers can really bring a sharp character to a garden, as well as inspire new ideas with paths and walkways trimmed with beautiful ground cover.

Most gardening equipment is quite straight forward, and buying an edger doesn’t have to be any more difficult than feeling the weight and noticing the height of the edger. If it feels light enough for you to handle and it isn’t too tall for you to manage, then really, that’s what counts in a quality edger. Your garden can then take on a whole new crisp and clean appearance with very little extra work.

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