Most Powerful Rechargeable Lawn Mower

June 23, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Yard & Garden Tools

Before you buy a rechargeable lawn mower, read this unbiased review!

TurboGarden 36vCordless Lawn Mower quiet and powerful electric lawn mower.Buy Turbo Garden Mower

The most powerful cordless lawn mower on Earth.


The liberation of the alternative power lawn mower.

Now you can mow your lawn without the hinderance of an electrical cord and finish the job in one day. There now a really macho electric rechargeable lawn mowers that can mow over an acre on one charge. If you’ve seen on cordless lawn mower, you haven’t seen them all. Being the landscaper’s daugher that I am, I got kind of curious about whether these cordless lawn mowers were as wimpy as they sound. Surprise! I did a study of features and actaul people who have really put these new earth friendly lawn tools to use.

Can you get a really good cut from a rechargeable lawnmower? Yes, you can!

The biggest issue people have with a average cordless electric lawn mowers is the battery is too small for the task. Tall grass and wet grass puts far too much strain on the engineered power source. Lots of folks are complaining that their cordless lawn mowers are worthless. Your run of the mill rechargeable lawnmower is designed to run for 45 minutes in dry grass that is mowed without fail on a weekly or bi-weekly basis. Some parts of the growing season, the grass can get ridiculously long in seven days time. Additionally, if you have long spell of rainy days, it is pretty difficult to mow your lawn every seven days like clockwork.

The Garden Turbo rechargeable lawn mower … 2.5 hours per full charge!

This is only the minimum full power mowing time on a single solid charge. You can get up to 4 hours of powerful lawn mowing action from Garden Turbo Help save our earth with cordless lawn mowers. Plus, in a few years when it is time to replace your battery, Garden Turbo’s manufacturer won’t force you buy some specially designed battery. Your new Garden Turbo TGP-CLM-8 mower uses a standard NiCad battery that you can purchase anywhere. Tons of lift power and enough juice to mow even a lawn that is an acre or more … on one full charge! Now that is what you call a mean green lawn mowing machine.

Don’t just take my word as why you should buy a Garden Turbo mower.

This unique rechargeable lawnmower is the leader of the pack in the same price bracket. Is it really worth buying a less mean mowing machine just to save $50 on a currently offered rebate? The Worx ECO 24v model Help save our earth with rechargeable lawn mower hopes you will. Be forewarned though, if the battery charger dies you won’t be able to replace it on that pricey Worx cordless electric lawn mower.

The Neuton CE6 does have a side clipping chute, but think again.

You have to buy the battery charger separate and are forever bound to purchase batteries from Neuton. Both the Neuton CE6 and Worx ECO 24v rechargeable lawn mower will only run for 45-60 minutes per single full charge when the batteries are NEW. Additionally, both of these cordless lawn mowers will not run near that long in tall grass or wet grass due to excess strain on your power supply.

Lost In The Flowers:  Rechargeable Lawn Mower Review

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The perfect rechargeable lawn mower is here.

To all the weekend lawn rangers out there, this is the cordless lawn mower for you. In a nutshell, Garden Turbo TCP-CLM-8 is the best rechargeable lawn mower available today. Saving money and being a greener citizen is the choice  every savvy homeowner should make. The Garden Turbo Rechargeable Lawn Mower is perfect for even larger lawns in one charge.

Go Green …

Mow down pollution and save cash one yard at a time.


Plants Slugs Don’t Like to Eat

June 6, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Gardening Tips & Info

Stop the slugs eating flowers in your yard.

There are some beautiful plants that slugs don’t like to eat. Here is a planting tip that you may find really helpful if you are really plagued by the garden pest slug.

Control planting as a defense mechanism!

You probably don’t think so at the moment, but slugs are rather picky about what they eat. If you arrange your flower beds with careful planning before planting, you could protect some of the plants that are more attractive to slugs. Installing barrier plantings with plants that repel slugs would definitely be to your advantage.

It has been discovered that the astringent smell of Astrantia foliage is not to their liking. Slugs don’t like to eat Astrantia, nor do they want to pass through a row of them.

Ruby Wedding Astrantia

Astrantia ‘Ruby Wedding’

Most plants that stop slugs from eating your flowers won’t deal with the same planting conditions as hostas. However, this isn’t the only places gardeners have problems with slugs eating their plants. To assist you in halting the havoc in your garden or landscaping, here is a most amazing assortment of plants that slugs don’t like to eat.

Perennial Plants

Lady's Mantle (Achemilla mollis) Alchemilla mollis  – Lady’s Mantle

Glory of the Andes Alstoemeria Alstroemeria – Peruvian Lily

Arabis – Rock Cress , Armeria – Sea Pink

Blue Columbine (Aquilegia) Aquilegia – Columbine, Arabis, Armeria,

Astilbe 'Visions in Red' Astilbe – Feather Flower , Bergenia – Pig Squeak, Cerastium – Snow-In-Summer

Cheiranthus, Wallflower, Crocosmia – Montbretia

 Cottage Pinks (Dianthus 'Tiny Rubies;) Dianthus – Carnations/Pinks, Dicentra – Bleeding Heart

Goldcrest Foxgloves (Digitalis 'Goldcrest') Digitalis – Foxglove

Echinacea 'Meringue' Echinacea -  Coneflower

Euphorbia 'First Blush' Euphorbia – Cushion Spurge, Ferns, Ornamental Grasses

Geranium platypetalum Geranium – Hardy Geranium/Cranesbill, Hemerocallis – Daylily

Tiramisu Heuchera Heuchera – Coral Bell

Unexpected surprise … Hostas are plants slugs don’t like to eat!

The green or gold leaf hostas including the variegated forms of these colored leaf perennials are a slugs idea of smorgasbord delights. The waxy coated leaves of this blue hosta are plants that slugs don’t like to eat.

Bressingham Blue Hosta Hosta Bressingham Blue

Iberis – Candy Tuft, Iris, Lamium – Spotted Dead Nettle, Lavender,

Leucanthemum – Shasta Daisy, Nepeta – Catmint

Edulus Superba Peony Paeonia – Peony Tree and Peony Bush

Dark Towers Penstemon Penstemon – Beard Tongue, Phlox subulata – Creeping Phlox

Phlox paniculata 'Laura' Phlox paniculata – Garden Phlox, Polemonium – Jacob’s Ladder

Pulmonaria – Lungwort, Rudbeckia – Black-Eyed Susan, Salvia – Meadow Sage

'Beaujolais Bonnet' Scabiosa Scabiosa – Pincushion Flower, Sedum – Stonecrop

Stachys – Lamb’s Ears

Thalictrum 'Lavendar Mist' Thalictrum – Meadow Rue, Verbascum – Mullein

Veronica – Speedwell, Vinca minor – Periwinkle

Hardy Shrubs & Vines


Red Mollis Azalea Azalea, Camellia, Ilex – Holly

Hydrangea 'Edgy Hearts' Hydrangea, Potentilla, Rhododendron

Proven Winners ... Peachy Cream Shrub Rose Rosa – Roses, Viburnum – Snow Ball Bush

Slug control with plant selection is continual.

You will be able to enjoy hostas with no holes in the leaves after all when choosing the waxy coated blue hosta plants. Just remember that slugs are there for the moisture and the food. Space your plants farther apart and you take away the conditions they prefer. This allows light and airflow to change the environment in your planting beds.

Learning about the different approaches to getting rid of slugs in your garden can be really helpful to protect the plants that you love as much as the garden slug does. You’ll find all methods used to control slugs, both commercial and homemade discussed in Secrets of a Slug-Free Garden here on Lost In The Flowers.

More Elements of Garden Design

June 4, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Garden Design Solutions

Continued from Elements of Garden Design – chapter one 4-19-09

It is always possible to upgrade a mulch path in the future.

Mulched path in the garden.

Copyright Lost In The Flowers 2003

In the beginning, you will want to put as much of your available budget into patio and plants than a boring walkway. Mulch is a great less-mud solution. Get the garden going for some enjoyment and emotional rewards, then worry about a investing in path paving later.

Lawn pathways will force you to bag mow between all your lovely planting beds. A lawn in seed will create a lot more weeding chores for you too. If mowed without it all being caught, your gardens will look like someone made an attempt to return them to lawn. A nightmare none of you will be happy to encounter. Mulch is definitely the least expensive and sustainable solution.
Seclusion will be important to anyone who lives close to neighbors.

Privacy screening that flowers from vines like Clematis.

Courtesy of Creative Commons 2.0

Top of the list of needs for 98% of my design clients is privacy in the backyard. You have a few choices, such as fence, masonry walls and evergreen hedges. The amount of space you have will definitely dictate what real options you have. In a small yard, use of space will be hugely important and a big hedge could eat up your garden area quickly. A living wall means you will have to research to make sure the shrubs will not get too wide.

Small yards are usually best secluded with walls and fences. This is the only way to get instant privacy. A hedge will take years to mature and fill. Walls and fences never water, fertilizer or trimming. They cost more up front but nothing over the years. A really narrow privacy screen shrub will require so many to not have gaps they get very expensive to install. If space is at a minimum, your best choice will be a hardscape barrier. The added value is the heightened interest of leafy and flowering plants against a wall or fence.

Natural lighting control is of great importance.

Shaded spaces in the garden.

Copyright Lost In The Flowers 2003

The sweltering sun early evening sun is not going to set a lovely dinner location. You need shade for your living room. Remember you will spend the most time in it over the warm months of the year. Do you have a mature shade tree just waiting to be put to use? Newer homes may not have this luxury available until some years from now.

The fastest shade source will be a pergola, ramada or awning unless you want to be patient for a decade or so. For the most rapid tree shade you will want to make sure you pick one that will not take over your yard with roots. I suggest you check out Paulownia x elongata, a hybrid Royal Empress tree.

Not all gardens have enough room to add shade as large as a tree.

Think about what you want to grow in your garden. The small yard belonging to a person who longs for full sun flowering plants and fresh vegetables needs to think about the future availability of needed sunshine. A tree will create an ever-increasing shaded area that over time will force you to completely change the kinds of plants you will be able to grow.

If you have the space to allow a shady area and full sun, you will be able to grow a far larger variety of lovely ornamentals. Plus the added benefit of being able to cool off on a hot day. The shelter of a leafy canopy is the perfect place to put your feet up and relax while enjoying a lovely garden surrounding. There are few places you can experience that will give you this amount of peace and tranquility.

Paver stones path

Copyright Lost In The Flowers 2001

All back yards need some lawn areas to accommodate pets and children.

A family sized home needs to have grassy stretches to give growing legs a place to burn off their energy. For empty nesters, some lawn expanses will add an element of space that is very welcome to the eye.  It all is very dependent on the amount of property you have and the uses you need to be able to get from the available area.

Even if all you children have grown and left home, the resale of your property will require it to be attractive to any buyer who needs the number of bedrooms you have. While it may be tempting to do away with all lawn expanses, it will be a wiser selling point if the new owner has a place for a dog or children to romp.