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The list of excuses for why I've been scarce around here this fall is about as long as our average winter, but suffice to say we've been busy. Mostly cow and horse stuff, but also trying to clean the place up a little before the snow came to stay. For a person who isn't all that fond of yard work, I seem to
have an annoying habit of ending up with a lot of it. Which wouldn't be so bad
if I also had a tendency to acquire the proper equipment for doing said
yard work. Alas, not so, until recently.
My yard woes started in South Dakota, when I married a man
who lived on twenty acres out in the countryside. The lawn itself was at least an acre. Then there was another three acres surrounding it that grew up in waist
high grass and six foot tall kochia weeds if left untended. Now, I'm not over
and above letting things go, but in the eastern South Dakota humidity
mosquitoes can breed in the dew on tall grass, and let's not even talk about
the ticks. Keeping a decent yard
turned out to be an act of survival.
Luckily, I had a self-propelled lawn mower. And no, that
doesn't mean I propelled it myself. The first time my brand new husband dragged
this thing out of the weeds behind the shop, I was dubious at best. The
Mows-All was built sometime in early years of the industrial revolution, and consisted
of what looked like a motorcycle engine mounted on a flat platform that sat a
good foot off the ground with the fully exposed blade whirling beneath. It had
a drive chain hooked to the rear wheels, but no throttle to speak of. We had
'Go' and we had 'Stop'. And when you stuck it in 'Go' you'd better have a good
hold, because it would jerk you off your feet.
One thing I will say for the Mows-All, it performed as advertised.
It could—and did—chew through anything. Dense grass, kochia with stems the size
of your thumb, medium-sized trees, hoses, stray fence posts and random pieces
of old farm equipment. Didn't matter if you saw them coming, at the rate of
speed we were usually traveling you couldn't stop or turn the thing in time to
avoid 'em anyway. As my husband pointed out, though, it did eliminate a lot of
clutter around the yard, and what with manhandling it all summer I saved a
fortune in gym memberships.
Flash forward to this past spring. We bought a rental
property in town, and just our luck it sits on three full lots of mostly grass.
Oh, goody. Yard work. We immediately started shopping for a riding mower and
decided this time, we'd go top of the line. It was wonderful. Not least because our own house sits in my mother's back
yard, which is slightly smaller than a state park with equally as many trees.
Come fall, we zipped back to the John Deere dealership and
picked up a leaf blower attachment, which was equally amazing, although it did
strike me as odd that I, who believes dim lighting is the key to keeping a
house looking livable, was out vacuuming the lawn. I was determined to do as
little actual raking as possible, so I cut as close around the trees as I
could. This worked fine as long as I was circling counter-clockwise, but then I
swapped directions, which put the leaf blower on the side toward the tree.
In case you've never seen one, a tractor-mounted leaf blower
is basically a large hose that hooks on where the grass shoots out down on the
bottom of the mower and curves up and around to dump the stuff into a bin
behind where the driver sits. The hose comes apart so you can easily clear any
blockages, such as a big ol' dog bone that got stuck in there sideways.
Unfortunately, it also comes apart if you hook it on something.
Say, a tree
branch.
The hose came undone at a point just behind my right
shoulder and tipped toward me, shooting dry leaf mulch straight at the back of
my head, down both the front and back of my shirt, even down the back of my
pants. Let me tell you, there's nothing quite like the sensation of shredded
leaf bits and pine needles forcibly injected into your butt crack.
I bailed off the mower, pawing at my clothes, but I couldn't
shake any of it loose. Luckily, I live in the middle of nowhere and the rest of
the family was out and about. But just in case the Google Earth satellite
happened to be passing over, taking snapshots for all the world to see, now you
know why I was dancing around the backyard in my underwear.
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3 comments:
Yard work is always so much fun - not!
I've done this! :) After I mow, I have to "rinse off" in the shower BeFORE I can wash! LOL
YES! There were little bits of leaves EVERYWHERE in my house, even after I stripped down to my underwear before coming in.
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