Lawn edging?

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paperfist

Diamond Member
Nov 30, 2000
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www.the-teh.com
I have to do about 200' of lawn edging. I tried using some pressure treated to build boxes for the trees and plants, but it looks like hell a few years later.

Would love to use stone, but that will get pricey.

Thinking about just cutting the edge of the grass away and filling the rest with mulch or small stones.

Can you guys recommend anything?
 

highland145

Lifer
Oct 12, 2009
43,973
6,336
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I wanted the curved concrete edging but the landscaper said it wouldn't go with the house. Whatever.

So pine straw in the beds and around the trees. Use an edger (which just crapped out) and the blower to keep a few inch gap of dirt between the straw and grass. It looks "neat". You do need to stay after it. Some how the straw creeps back into the gap. I edge about every month.

Like this.
pinestraw.jpg
 

cabri

Diamond Member
Nov 3, 2012
3,616
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Plastic edging from Home Depot/Lowes/Ace will work fine. $20-30 per 40 ft length
Mower can cut over it without blade damage, but it keeps the grass from expanding into the protected area
 

Ban Bot

Senior member
Jun 1, 2010
796
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We are planning out our lawn and have the same question.

We have red brick patios which look very nice. I was thinking of using red concrete bricks for the ~ 150' of lawn edging we need in the front yard between the grass and flower beds. They are $0.29 each so it would come to about $130.

We tore out the old brown terrace board--it was beat up, broken, not level, etc. It doesn't provide much of a boarder and I am not a fan of the look. And to put it back in will cost $80.

Would prefer to pay $50 more for a more permanent solution.

The question is are those red concrete bricks durable enough? Sitting in the ground/mud/water year round.
 

paperfist

Diamond Member
Nov 30, 2000
6,539
286
126
www.the-teh.com
I wanted the curved concrete edging but the landscaper said it wouldn't go with the house. Whatever.

So pine straw in the beds and around the trees. Use an edger (which just crapped out) and the blower to keep a few inch gap of dirt between the straw and grass. It looks "neat". You do need to stay after it. Some how the straw creeps back into the gap. I edge about every month.

Like this.
pinestraw.jpg

I wanted to use that stuff too from Lowes/Home Depot, but it looks like the colors on them fade.
 

paperfist

Diamond Member
Nov 30, 2000
6,539
286
126
www.the-teh.com
We are planning out our lawn and have the same question.

We have red brick patios which look very nice. I was thinking of using red concrete bricks for the ~ 150' of lawn edging we need in the front yard between the grass and flower beds. They are $0.29 each so it would come to about $130.

We tore out the old brown terrace board--it was beat up, broken, not level, etc. It doesn't provide much of a boarder and I am not a fan of the look. And to put it back in will cost $80.

Would prefer to pay $50 more for a more permanent solution.

The question is are those red concrete bricks durable enough? Sitting in the ground/mud/water year round.

I'd scrape the brick with something to see if the color is all the way through. If it is I couldn't see why it wouldn't be durable. But if you want to make rounded beds it's going to be tough with those.

I put some expensive paves in for the area leading up to my front stairs. They were 3 different colors. They are now starting to fade showing the core color and I'm not too happy.
 

herm0016

Diamond Member
Feb 26, 2005
8,502
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the bricks will be hard to keep in place without mortar and a few rows below grade and a solid sand and tamped down foundation. i have sandstone in the front that is just set on grade and its all falling over, pushed around and there are weeds growing through it.

the metal i have is the brown color and has faded a touch, but its really not big deal/all looks the same still. I set it between and inch and 2 inches above grade, so i can put a wheel of the mower over the edge and just mow around it and avoid using the string trimmer. It was a bit hard to install in the less level area of my yard, but it makes nice curves and is staying in place much better than the plastic stuff or the thin metal, or the sandstone in the front yard.
 

MongGrel

Lifer
Dec 3, 2013
38,466
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I just slap some timbers on the ground, but maybe I'm lazy :)

ktn6kkQ.jpg


Buy some more wood maybe ? But you are in a different temperate zone.

I guess you want to do something different it sounds.

But we got rid of the front yard more or less anyways, I suppose.

The wife is going out to pick some Plumeria's from the front yard for the kitchen as we speak, there a few odd ball plants out there, too :)
 
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paperfist

Diamond Member
Nov 30, 2000
6,539
286
126
www.the-teh.com
I just slap some timbers on the ground, but maybe I'm lazy :)

ktn6kkQ.jpg


Buy some more wood maybe ? But you are in a different temperate zone.

I guess you want to do something different it sounds.

But we got rid of the front yard more or less anyways, I suppose.

The wife is going out to pick some Plumeria's from the front yard for the kitchen as we speak, there a few odd ball plants out there, too :)

Yeah really wanted something fancy. Wood doesn't last around here especially after you beat it up with the weed whacker.

The cut sod/grass line is really growing on me. I see it at commercial buildings all the time.
 

3chordcharlie

Diamond Member
Mar 30, 2004
9,859
1
81
If you like the look of a 'maintained' edge, do an image search for "aluminum garden edging'.

Many of the images will be of silver colored but it also comes in brown and black.

I've done installations of this that still look great after 5-7 years. I've never taken any of it out.
 

lupi

Lifer
Apr 8, 2001
32,539
260
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Plastic edging from Home Depot/Lowes/Ace will work fine. $20-30 per 40 ft length
Mower can cut over it without blade damage, but it keeps the grass from expanding into the protected area

I have the soft plastic pvc type stuff that has a circle at the type that acts as the divider and then a ridge blade below to allow to be placed easily into the soil.

After several years of cutting/trimming up to it, has gone without any sign of damage/wear so I'd say it was a good buy.
 
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