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Fall leaf-pick-up
Filled and dumped the sixth load of the season with my Trac-Vac.
The 35 cubic foot bin packs a lot of grass and leaves. The worst part is emptying it...it's like a giant bale of hay. I bought the thing in 1980...so it's served me well. What is everyone else using for their yards? http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1603663754.jpg |
I bought a used Trac Vac earlier this year so will be using it soon for the first time . Looking forward to seeing how well it does but anything is better than hand raking .
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^^^I found the most important thing about the Trac-Vac is getting a good air-tight connection between the mower deck and the chute that is on the end of the pick-up hose.
If it's not sealed...it allows outside air in, and the vacuum is decreased. If all is working correctly...the lawn will look like a golf course! (I don't use mine all summer..mostly in the fall) |
We just mow the leaves and chop them up.... And we don't bag our grass clippings. Never have understood the reason for bagging grass clippings.
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^^^ I mostly use the Trac-Vac for the leaves. There are too many trees in my yard to mow them up. The yard would be brown (with chopped leaves)
My problem is finding a place to get rid of them after chopping and vacuuming them up. |
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I’m another one of those that just uses a mulcher mower and leaves the grass clipping and chopped up leaves on the ground.
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I mulch my grass and try to stay ahead of falling leaves and mulch them too. Sometimes they fall too fast ... then there are just way too many. I will blow my back yards' leaves into the woods tomorrow :). For my larger property, with mega leaves.... I purchased a Cyclone Rake several years ago... should have bought one decades ago.
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I have lived on 10 country acres for 25 years now, that has alot of maple/oak/ash trees that all shed leaves big time. All that time, I have never raked any leaves, my 72" mower does a nice job on chopping them up, and by February, the incessant winds have scoured any trace of them into surrounding fields.
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Years ago before I convinced my wife that mowing the leaves was the easiest way to deal with them, I on occasion drove my airplane around the yard attempting to blow some of the leaves into a smaller area to then rake and burn.
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I do the Tim method without the airplane. Blow them to the side yard. The bugs, mice, birds are pretty happy with this.
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Credit card is my current best leaf removal tool!
Got too busy at work a few years ago, so hired it out and haven’t looked back. This year is weird as we got snow last week and barely any leaves had dropped; there is still light snow cover and leaves on some of the trees. |
two acres. 100's of trees, I blow them into the woods 4-5 times. The oaks are the last to give them up, around thanksgiving. I pay somebody for that last batch. I hate autumn..
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I try to blow them all over into my neighbors yard
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I went to visit my brother in Montgomery, AL and he had a HUGE pile of leaves on the front yard. I asked about it and he said the city comes by the next day and uses a giant vacuum and compactor and picks them up. No trash backs to mess with.
That would never work in Oklahoma, it is hard to make a pile of leaves that last long enough to put in a bag when it is typical windy weather. |
My next-door neighbor (to the east) is an elderly lady living by herself.
Therefore, I try to keep all my leaves on my side, if possible. |
I much them with my push mower until it becomes too much.
2 Maple trees. This weekend I mulched/bagged with my blower and ended up with 10 bags. Sore today. |
I don't have grass and very vew leaves.
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When I was a kid, me & my dad would rake the leaves up into a pile at the curb in front of the house and burn them in a low, smoldering fire. All the neighbors would do the same. Could never get away with that now...
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