Landscape Lighting

Protect your landscape lighting investment! Dig deep trenches, use conduit, and leave wire slack to avoid cut lines and future headaches.

Illuminated house exterior at night featuring architectural lighting and a highlighted Japanese maple tree

There’s nothing quite like pulling into the driveway and seeing the house lit up properly, highlighting the architecture or that Japanese maple you spent a fortune on. The temptation with those big box store low voltage kits is to treat them like temporary holiday decorations, stringing the wire across the mulch and kicking a little dirt over it just to get the job done before kickoff. While low voltage doesn’t carry the same shock risk as your main electrical lines, leaving that cable shallow is just begging for a lawnmower blade or a weed eater to shred your hard work the first time you do any serious yard maintenance.

Take the extra time to trench down at least six inches so the wire sits safely below the reach of garden tools and aeration spikes. If you have to cross a sidewalk or a high-traffic path, run that section of wire through a stick of PVC conduit to protect it from getting crushed or kicked up over time. It’s also smart to leave a small loop of extra wire buried at every fixture location because plants grow and light needs change; having that slack means you won’t have to dig up the entire run just to shift a spotlight a foot to the left next spring.

Putting in the sweat equity now prevents the headache of troubleshooting a cut line later when the ground is hard or it’s pouring rain. A well-installed system should disappear into the landscaping during the day and only show up when the sun goes down to do its job. Grab a flat-head shovel, take your time with the trenching, and enjoy the view from the porch once everything is glowing.

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