No, Jim, I didn't. I kinda pulled the grass away from the sidewalk edge and stuffed the cord under the grass up against the concrete. I purchased the control center last year. My first thought was to come out of the breaker panel in the garage with UG wire to a 4 by 4 post buried in the ground with an all-weather outlet attached to the post. After figuring the cost of doing that plus the labor involved, I started looking at the various pond supply stores on the web. This control center was exactly what was needed. I had a box of 12 Toro outdoor lights and the center has timed outlets for that kind of lighting. The Toro kit came with day/night sensor and transformer and I just plugged the transformer into a 110 outlet in the center. I'd recommend that set-up for anyone that has an out door pond, be it for turtles or just fish or just a plain garden pond with a pump for a water display. The main reason is the built-in GFI breaker. If, for any reason, an electrical unit in the pond has a short, you or yours won't get electrocuted while reaching into the pond if forgetting to unplug the unit. My older grandkids and a couple of my daughters reach in the pond to get their favorite turt and don't need to get a shock or worse. No matter what the source of electricity is for your pond, you must have that source plugged into a GFI breaker first. George
