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Tips for Buying Landscaping Equipment
By Andrew Caxton

Designing and then caring for one's lawn and gardens is a favorite hobby around the world. As with any hobby, there are a vast amount of tools and materials that can be purchased to make this care as easy as possible, and its important that one use the correct tool, and the correct materials, for the job.

Quality vs Price
Whenever you purchase something, you're torn between whether or not you should buy something cheap that will do the job just as well as something that's more expensive. Typically, with such things as garden tools, it's better to purchase the best quality tools you can. If you buy a cheap tool that breaks after only a couple of uses, and then have to buy another cheap tool, it will end up being more expensive than if you had just bought a quality tool to begin with.

Basic garden tools including items, such as cultivators, trowels, pruning sheers and hedge trimmers are small enough to be stored in a garage or potting shed. These tools should never be left out in the open to gather rust, or placed on a cold cement floor. Put up a pegboard against one wall so that you can hang up all your tools. If you have small children, make sure that any items with sharp edges have guards on them.

Larger tools such as shovels, rakes, spades can take up a lot of room, but if you purchase a rack that you can mount on your wall, you'll be able to keep them neatly organized.

Now, for even larger and bulkier tools, such as wheelbarrows, power de-thatchers, aerators and garden rollers, you'll have to ask yourself, do you use them often enough to warrant buying them? These large tools are usually available for rent from your local garden center.

Watering wisdom Hoses are just about the most unwieldy piece of equipment you can own. If you've wrestled with coiling up a hose you know that it can be a pain. The best way to solve this problem is to buy a reel on which to store the hose. Reels that are meant to stand on the ground don't work as well than those that can attach to the side of your house.

Landscaping made easy
Weeding can be one of the most time-consuming and back-breaking jobs in caring for a garden. Make things easy for yourself to begin with by using landscape fabric. However, never use plastic sheeting - that kills soil and plants and is just a bad idea all around.

There are some jobs that will never go away, of course. You'll need a lawnmower. There are quite a few choices - push mowers that are either gasoline powered or electric, or for those larger lawns, a riding mower. If you have a hillside to take care of as well, make sure your mower has a low center of gravity, and make sure no one uses it who doesn't have the appropriate strength to do so.

Andrew Caxton is a consultant who writes on many consumer topics like lawn care for http://www.lawn-mowers-and-garden-tractors.com . Find more publications about landscape equipment at his website.

 

 

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Used Lawn Equipment - How to Find the Best Deals
By Steven Blades

Self maintained lawn care is not exactly a cheap enterprise. In fact, when you take into account the prices of the actual lawnmower, an aerator, fertilizer, and other items, you are looking at a price tag that could potentially surpass $3,000. The best bet in maintaining your lawn business for cheap is to go with used lawn equipment.

The first place you will want to look for used lawn equipment is in your local newspaper. The classified ads are usually full of advertisements for riding lawnmowers, aerators, weed whackers and other items that you will need to maintain your customers lawns. Depending on what you are looking to buy, how old the item in question is and how often the owner has had it prior, you could be looking at huge savings over a similar item you would have to buy at retail.

Another place to look that others often overlook is yard sales. While many yard sales are little more than dumping grounds for people who are looking to get rid of old clothes and other assorted items, every once in a while you can find an incredible deal on a used push mower or weed whacker that can wind up saving you several hundred dollars off of similar products from your local equipment shop.

However you're most likely (and successful) option for finding used lawn care products is online. Specialty sites like EquipmentLocator.com and LawnSite.com have listings from people looking to sell their old and used yard equipment. Another good place to look online for used equipment is your local CraigsList.org page. Ultimately, though, your best bet for finding the cheapest used lawn care equipment is on the auction site eBay. With over 11,000 listings on eBay for used lawn care equipment that ranges from push mowers to riding mowers, weed whackers to aerators, if you search long enough you will certainly find exactly what you're looking for, and in the process save yourself a lot of money.