Summary
What this review covers
This review focuses on the 200 piece count, 6 inch galvanized U-shape, 11 gauge wire, and fit for planned fabric and cover hold-down work.
Pros
The upside
- The 200 piece count gives a full bed project plenty of anchor points for fabric edges, seams, corners, and cover lines.
- The 6 inch U-shape is simple to place along prepared soil, mulch edges, drip tubing, and small row-cover runs.
- The galvanized steel finish suits repeated outdoor setup, seasonal cleanup, and shed storage.
Cons
The tradeoffs
- Dense clay, roots, and stones call for a careful push so the staple keeps its clean shape.
- A counted layout helps the pack stay organized when a project has long edges and several overlap points.
Who it is for
Fit and feel
Good match:
This pack suits gardeners building bed edges, fabric-covered paths, drip-line routes, and row-cover edges that need many small anchor points.
What to know:
Count the main corners, overlap lines, and edge runs before opening the box. A simple pin plan helps the whole surface feel even from the first corner to the last edge.
Where to check it
Check Pinnacle Mercantile USA Made 200 Pack Garden Landscape Staples
Open the current merchant listing if the buyer fit and tradeoffs still line up.
- Amazon opens the Pinnacle Mercantile 200 pack garden landscape staples product page.
Breakdown
Full review
A full box of small anchor points
Pinnacle Mercantile Garden Landscape Staples are 6 inch galvanized U-shaped pins for the small hold-down points that make a bed surface feel settled. They can seat landscape fabric, hold drip tubing close to the soil, pin netting edges, and help covers stay aligned during a setup day.
The 200 piece count feels useful for a real backyard project. A bed edge, fabric seam, corner fold, and path border can each receive steady pin spacing from one box.
Simple galvanized staples for prepared soil
Each staple has an 11 gauge galvanized steel wire and a straight U-shape. The form is easy to understand: press the pin through the material and into prepared soil until the top sits close to the surface.
The shape works well when fabric has been cut, overlapped, and covered with mulch, bark, straw, or stone. A regular row of pins gives the whole surface a clear rhythm.
Useful around fabric, mesh, and drip routes
These staples fit the little jobs that gather around a finished bed. They can hold fabric corners while mulch is being spread, guide drip lines along a row, or keep a cover edge seated near a path.
Keep a hand trowel, small mallet, or pilot tool nearby when the soil has roots, stones, or dry compacted spots. A calm push protects the staple shape and keeps the placement neat.
Good match
This pack suits gardeners building bed edges, fabric-covered paths, drip-line routes, and row-cover edges that need many small anchor points.
What to know
Count the main corners, overlap lines, and edge runs before opening the box. A simple pin plan helps the whole surface feel even from the first corner to the last edge.