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#1
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Lawn edgers?
I am thinking about buying a lawn edger. I have a corner lot, so quite
a bit of sidewalk to edge, plus several flower beds. So far, I have seen an electric edger, a manual rolling one, and the standard "half-moon" type (sort of like a flat hoe). Does anyone have any recommendations about which kind works best? Obviously, the electric one holds out the promise of involving the least labor, but do they work well? Are they easy to handle? Would I be further ahead just to hire someone to edge the lawn once a year (leaving aside the "less labor" issue)? Thanks in advance, Jo Ann |
#2
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Lawn edgers?
" wrote in message
ups.com... I am thinking about buying a lawn edger. I have a corner lot, so quite a bit of sidewalk to edge, plus several flower beds. So far, I have seen an electric edger, a manual rolling one, and the standard "half-moon" type (sort of like a flat hoe). Does anyone have any recommendations about which kind works best? Obviously, the electric one holds out the promise of involving the least labor, but do they work well? Are they easy to handle? Would I be further ahead just to hire someone to edge the lawn once a year (leaving aside the "less labor" issue)? Thanks in advance, Jo Ann I also have a corner lot and if you have anything near the linear feet to edge that I do then you don't want ANY of those. You want a gas powered edger. The electric is tolerable (barely) after you have done the edging two or three times into the growing season (essentially you are just cleaning the existing trench), but establishing that trench the first few times in the spring is a terrible chore for both you and the edger. My electric B & D died after 3 or 4 seasons and I replaced it with a 3 1/2 hp gas powered. What a difference! All you do is walk slowly and guide the thing. With electric I was going back and forth several times in the same space to get a good edge. |
#3
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Lawn edgers?
Edgers kind of died when people realised their weed wacker was the
easiest edger to use. |
#4
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Lawn edgers?
On 7 May 2006 08:34:30 -0700, "
wrote: I am thinking about buying a lawn edger. I have a corner lot, so quite a bit of sidewalk to edge, plus several flower beds. Of all the edgers that I've seen over the years, the one that I probably like the best is one my father had many years ago when I was a kid... This was back before the days of the string trimmers... He had built an edger that instead of having a blade like you see these days, had a few links of double loop chain spinning like a blade... The blade types these days will nick the concrete if you don't keep it aligned perfectly with the edge of your driveway... With the chain type, if you got off alignment a bit, it would just spark a bit to let you know that you needed to adjust your track a bit... These days, I just use my string trimmer to do my driveways, but it's more work and doesn't look as neat as that old trimmer he built... |
#5
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Lawn edgers?
No, I don't want to trim along the edge, i.e., weed whack. I want to
do as Rick suggested and actually create an edge between the sidewalk and the yard. The turf has actually started to over-grow the sidewalk quite a bit and it needs to be cut back and an edge established. Jo Ann |
#6
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Lawn edgers?
I was walking my dog last week and was able to watch a lawn maintenance guy
use a Ryobi weed wacker with a blade attachment do a beautiful job of edging his lawn. He had a corner house with a lot of edging to do and it took him about ten minutes with the attachment he used. Derek in Florida |
#7
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Lawn edgers?
I used to use a cheap Pullan gas edger. It looked like a gas weedeater but
instead of the fishline running parallel to the ground it used a blade running perpendicular to the ground. Buy extra blades. It was around $125 bucks at the time. An incredible bargain. I used it many years but finally decided to use a lawn maintenence service. " wrote in message ups.com... I am thinking about buying a lawn edger. I have a corner lot, so quite a bit of sidewalk to edge, plus several flower beds. So far, I have seen an electric edger, a manual rolling one, and the standard "half-moon" type (sort of like a flat hoe). Does anyone have any recommendations about which kind works best? Obviously, the electric one holds out the promise of involving the least labor, but do they work well? Are they easy to handle? Would I be further ahead just to hire someone to edge the lawn once a year (leaving aside the "less labor" issue)? Thanks in advance, Jo Ann |
#8
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Lawn edgers?
If you used a real edger once you would never use a weedwacker again.
"m Ransley" wrote in message ... Edgers kind of died when people realised their weed wacker was the easiest edger to use. |
#9
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Lawn edgers?
Art, ive used real edge trimmers, thats why I like a weed wacker, alot
easier to do. |
#10
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Lawn edgers?
Art wrote:
I used to use a cheap Pullan gas edger. It looked like a gas weedeater but instead of the fishline running parallel to the ground it used a blade running perpendicular to the ground. Buy extra blades. It was around $125 bucks at the time. An incredible bargain. I used it many years but finally decided to use a lawn maintenence service. " wrote in message ups.com... I am thinking about buying a lawn edger. I have a corner lot, so quite a bit of sidewalk to edge, plus several flower beds. So far, I have seen an electric edger, a manual rolling one, and the standard "half-moon" type (sort of like a flat hoe). Does anyone have any recommendations about which kind works best? Obviously, the electric one holds out the promise of involving the least labor, but do they work well? Are they easy to handle? Would I be further ahead just to hire someone to edge the lawn once a year (leaving aside the "less labor" issue)? Thanks in advance, Jo Ann I found the best tip from one of those home improvement shows. Edge the lawn, weahter against a flower bed or walkway, back and tappered, about 4 inches deep an tapper back toward lawn away from edge of bed or walkway. I ususally leave an additional space of a few inches. I then add a little mulch to the trench but all the way, leave a space that is lower the the level of the walk or bed. The grass will try and creep over, extending its roots into the trench, those roots will usually die since not enough soils to cover and support them from getting exposed to air. Re-edge only once a year with a spade and re-mulch. Seems to work for me. |
#11
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Lawn edgers?
I have a gas-powered Weedeater (paid $55) with a curved shaft. This
weed wacker is on its 14th year of service. Position the string vertically and steadily walk backwards. When this technique is mastered you'll get a professional-looking trim around the lawn. BTW, I learned this technique from an illegal alien. |
#12
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Lawn edgers?
I use a manual kind that I bought at Sears 20 years ago. I sharpen the
teeth once a year with a file. It doesn't contribute to global warming ("climate change" for you Republicans), and it gives me exercise. |
#13
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Lawn edgers?
To specifically answer the lady's questions, yes, CLEARLY it will be
cheaper to hire someone to edge once a year, if that is all you want. |
#14
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Lawn edgers?
On 7 May 2006 08:34:30 -0700, "
wrote: I am thinking about buying a lawn edger. I have a corner lot, so quite a bit of sidewalk to edge, plus several flower beds. So far, I have seen an electric edger, a manual rolling one, and the My house came with a manual one, and it works but is slow. Some places the lawn rolls over the sidewalk and the grass is tough, so it is really slow. Other places the lawn never encroaches on the walk so it's good. standard "half-moon" type (sort of like a flat hoe). ??? I got an electric one at a rummage sale for 3 or 4 dollars, but if I didn't have that, I'd use a string trimmer, a weedwacker. Unless it's a really small one, they work fine and there is no chance of scratching or chipping off pieces of the sidewalk. Does anyone have any recommendations about which kind works best? Obviously, the electric one holds out the promise of involving the least labor, but do they work well? Are they easy to handle? Would I If you don't point well, or there is enough grass encroachment that you're not sure where the edge is (a common situation) you'll hit the cement with a pretty powerful motor (dulling the blade I suppose, but I don't know how sharp the blade is to begin with or how much it depends on sharpness), or you'll cut slices in your lawn. Pointing well seems like it would be easy, but I guess the fact that I'm trying to cut real close to the cement and the blade is at the end of a 3 or 4 foot pole makes it harder. Can you borrow a neighbor's to try it out? be further ahead just to hire someone to edge the lawn once a year (leaving aside the "less labor" issue)? Thanks in advance, Jo Ann |
#16
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Lawn edgers?
On Sun, 07 May 2006 18:47:56 GMT, "Art"
wrote: If you used a real edger once you would never use a weedwacker again. Thats MY OPINION also... Not that I do not also own a weedwacker...since it too has its place...BUT for sidewalks draveways etc....The edger is King... Gas vs Electric is the only debate Bob G. |
#17
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Lawn edgers?
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#18
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Lawn edgers?
Someone had a question about the half-moon type I referred to. It's a
manual model. Envision a hoe blade that is flattened out (on the same plane as the handle, rather than bent at a right angle to it) and shaped like a half moon. You insert the curved (cutting) edge between sidewalk and lawn and step on it. At any rate, I think maybe a gas model is winning the debate. I took mm's advice and borrowed a neighbor's electric one and WHAT A CHORE that was! Part of the problem was that it's apparently been a l-o-n-g time since this was done (I haven't lived here long), and in places the lawn had encroached on the sidewalk as much as 4-6 inches. It had to be cut with a shovel and torn away like sod. It looks a lot better now, but a little uneven in spots where the shovel was resorted to, so now I have to wait for it to regrow a little and then even it out. I'm sure it won't be as bad in the future if I keep up with it (like so many lawn chores...), but I also think a gas model would have made it a much shorter, easier job. Jo Ann |
#20
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Lawn edgers?
Hmmm...now that seems very reasonable, and leaves me with one less new
tool to store and maintain, a definite plus! Thanks for the suggestion. Jo Ann |
#21
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Lawn edgers?
On 7 May 2006 11:10:16 -0700, "
wrote: No, I don't want to trim along the edge, i.e., weed whack. I want to do as Rick suggested and actually create an edge between the sidewalk and the yard. The turf has actually started to over-grow the sidewalk quite a bit and it needs to be cut back and an edge established. Jo Ann In my country, we call that a "curb". |
#22
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Lawn edgers?
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#23
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Lawn edgers?
"Derek Lawler" wrote in message ... I was walking my dog last week and was able to watch a lawn maintenance guy use a Ryobi weed wacker with a blade attachment do a beautiful job of edging his lawn. He had a corner house with a lot of edging to do and it took him about ten minutes with the attachment he used. And that has been done (probably) weekly for how many years? Beating down grass that has been growing over the curb for a while takes more than that. |
#24
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Lawn edgers?
" wrote in message ups.com... I am thinking about buying a lawn edger. I have a corner lot, so quite a bit of sidewalk to edge, plus several flower beds. So far, I have seen an electric edger, a manual rolling one, and the standard "half-moon" type (sort of like a flat hoe). Does anyone have any recommendations about which kind works best? Obviously, the electric one holds out the promise of involving the least labor, but do they work well? Are they easy to handle? Would I be further ahead just to hire someone to edge the lawn once a year (leaving aside the "less labor" issue)? Thanks in advance, Jo Ann Unless you like pain and frustration, just say NO to all of the above. Having read a follow up post or two by you let me say that the first time you edge neglected walks nothing will beat a well sharpened spade. If you cut the dirt back about an 1 from the edge of the walk and at least 2" deep you will have a nice clean line that can then be maintained with a gas powered edger if you do it a few times per year. If you edge every other grass mowing the string trimmer will do the same job but you use a lot string. I have the Ryobi weed wacker with a blade attachment and it does a great job. I also have the little tiller attachment. So basically I have 3 tools with one engine. They are actually sold under a different brand name now. Just look for the quick change tagline. Colbyt |
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