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EZG Manufacturing

Where no Truck has gone before…

WE’RE GOING THERE.

“because we can”

[ SEE IT IN ACTION ]

The Mobile Mud Hog®

Built for easy pours in difficult terrain this Hog literally delivers, bringing the same quality, efficiency, performance and safety that our agship Mud Hog® workhorse mixers have earned a reputation for— to just about anywhere along the fence line.

• Available in 4, 9, 12 and 20 cu.ft. • Handles grout, mortar & concrete • Designed for use with walk-behind or standard skid-steer loader

If it can be done better, smarter, safer, we know how.

©2021 EZG manufacturing. 00156 FNUSA 09/21

1-800-417-9272 / ezgmfg.com / sales@ezgmfg.com

1833 N. Riverview Road, Malta, Ohio 43758

EZG Manufacturing is a division of EZ Grout Corporation. All EZG Manufacturing products are backed by our two-year warranty on parts unless otherwise stated and are now available for order. including quad finials, circles and tight-spacing puppy pickets, giving the fence design a premium look worthy of this oneof-a kind property.

The next decision was how to create a lowmaintenance privacy fence that looked nothing like a typical vinyl privacy fence and would tie into the design elements of the ornamental fence. The folks at Ultra suggested a custom design incorporating their 6’ tall Eclipse VP privacy fence with the customized addition of the top 12” section of the ornamental fence used on the rest of the property. The body would be a vinyl T&G variegated board with a weathered look that was appropriate for the North Michigan lakeside location. The last major decision involved the gate design. Repeating all the options from the fence was the obvious starting point, but the homeowner wanted a custom inlay that would really set the gate apart. Given the lakefront location, a nautical theme seemed like an obvious choice and an anchor design was decided. “Not being satisfied with some of the custom waterjetted designs Ultra had done in the past, the homeowner collaborated with our CAD designer to design and produce an anchor that looked so realistic it could have come from a schooner that sailed the great lakes 100 years ago. It included a real chain that was welded in place!” explains Jodoin.

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