Summary
What this review covers
This edging fits gardeners who want a defined line around beds, paths, border plantings, and mulch surfaces.
Pros
The upside
- The 40 foot coil gives a backyard bed, border, or path edge a clear flexible line.
- Included anchoring spikes help seat the edging into prepared ground.
- The black plastic profile works around curves and straight garden sections.
Cons
The tradeoffs
- The edge line looks cleanest when the soil surface is raked and shaped first.
- Tight curves and firm ground ask for slow layout work before spikes go in.
Who it is for
Fit and feel
Good match:
This kit fits gardeners who want a flexible bed edge around mulch, paths, border plantings, and garden curves.
What to know:
Lay the full line first, check the curve, then add spikes once the shape feels right.
Where to check it
Check EasyFlex No-Dig Landscape Edging 40 Foot Kit
Open the current merchant listing if the buyer fit and tradeoffs still line up.
- Amazon opens the EasyFlex No-Dig Landscape Edging 40 Foot Kit product page.
Breakdown
Full review
A flexible edge for bed lines
The EasyFlex No-Dig Landscape Edging 40 Foot Kit gives a garden bed, border, path, or mulch line a defined black edge. The kit includes a coil of plastic edging and anchoring spikes, so the layout can move from planning to pinned shape in one session.
That kind of edge helps a bed feel finished after soil prep, planting, fabric, or mulch work.
The coil follows curves and straight runs
The plastic coil can follow a gentle curve around a bed or run straight along a path. Start by raking the soil surface, setting the line, and checking the shape from a standing position before the spikes go in.
Once the line feels right, the spikes hold the edging in place. Tidy preparation makes the finished edge feel settled.
The profile suits low bed separation
The 1.5 inch height gives mulch, lawn edges, and planting borders a visible break. It is useful around backyard beds where a gardener wants a simple line between grass, soil, mulch, or stone.
Firm ground can make spike placement slower. A hand tool, watering pass, or softened soil surface can help the edging seat with care.
Good match
This kit fits gardeners who want a flexible bed edge around mulch, paths, border plantings, and garden curves.
What to know
Lay the full line first, check the curve, then add spikes once the shape feels right.