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February 26, 2011

Tool time: perennial shovel and power lines

Photo credit: Baltimore Sun

This is a two-for-one post -- about the right tool for the job, and about knowing what's in the ground.

Garden bloggers get lots of stuff in the mail, and this week it was a short-handled shovel from Ames Hardware and a note from the Common Ground Alliance warning homeowners about the power lines and water pipes hidden underground.

Every three minutes, the group says, a gas, electric, cable, Internet, water or sewer line is accidentally damaged by digging done as part of a gardening or home improvement project. This damage can put entire neighborhoods at risk by disconnecting essential services.

One phone call to 811 will protect you from these unintended consequences. Utility companies will dispatch a locator to your site within a few days and mark the utility lines or pipes with paint or flags. After that, dig very carefully around these markers.

The shovel they used to make this point was a 17-inch spade -- an ideal perennial shovel. The spade is just large enough to help you dig around shrubs and larger perennials that are too big or too deep for a hand trowel.

And it is the prefect size for the trunk of your car during winter months. You can find them for about $10.

Posted by Susan Reimer at 8:00 AM |
Categories: Garden tools
        
About Susan Reimer
Susan Reimer has spent 16 years writing about raising kids - among other topics - in her column for The Baltimore Sun. And every time son Joseph or daughter Jessie passed another milestone - driver's license, college, wedding or a move to a new military duty station - she has planted another garden. Now she will be writing about those gardens - and yours - here on Garden Variety.

Susan isn't an expert gardener, but she wasn't an expert mother, either. Both - the kids and the gardens - seem to be doing well in spite of her.

She lives in Annapolis with her husband, Gary Mihoces, who loves to cut his grass but has noticed that there seems to be less of it every time the kids pass another milestone.
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