Grass cutting: difficult spots
Regular grass cutting is essential to keep the property looking neat and pretty. Many owners of small gardens usually buy an electric mower and manage it to get the lawn looking as desired. However, owners of very ornamental gardens or those with uneven terrain usually complain that they can't get all the details right. A lawnmower, let alone a garden tractor, can't get into every nook and cranny, and even if they did, they could accidentally cut down the plants you want to keep.
The power of the mower
A lawnmower compared to a garden tractor seems like a not very powerful machine. But comparing these machines doesn't make much sense. The tractor's job is to cut as large an area of grass as comfortably as possible. The brushcutter, on the other hand, has to get into places where a tractor or normal mower cannot go. It can trim difficult spots in the garden: those around ornamental plants or flowers, decorative gravel paths or small hills and holes. Although the majority of the work is always done by the mower, finishing off the mowing with the mower brings the final aesthetic effect and is the icing on the cake. Those who have hitherto struggled with hot spots on their plot can simply hire a mower for a day or two and see if it doesn't make garden work go more smoothly.
Combustion or electric?
The electric mowing machine only works well on small plots of land, as it is limited by the cable. On larger plots of land, the owner already has to think about connecting the device to an extension cord, and this interferes a little with the idea of the device, which was supposed to be quite mobile, lightweight and convenient to work with. Therefore, for medium and larger plots, a petrol mower is definitely a better idea, which we can use in every nook and cranny of the plot, even outside the fence, trimming the lawn in front of the gate or entrance gate.