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3 Acres, I pay $50/cut. And a pool, with extensive landscaping. Wouldn't do it again, dowsizing soon, I hate being a slave to the yard.
I thought you were headed south? |
Primary home in NJ - virtually no lawn, almost 0 maintenance. Weekender country home in PA - 13.5 Acres, about 2-3 of "lawn" and the rest woods. Takes about 2 hours to cut the "lawn" area, then another .5-1 hour if I want to clean up all the tight spots with push mower/trimmer. I usually do those tight spots every other mow...looks good enough for me. In the early growing season the "lawn" needs cutting every week, but that lasts for about a month, then it can be done every other week.
I enjoy running the equipment and being outside. I can always hire it out if I get sick of it. Over the last four years I've cleaned up alot of the wooded areas, dug trenches to improve drainage and created trails where I can walk my dogs, ride a little MX bike, visit our pond, etc. When we bought the place this was all overgrown, muddy and you could not walk around and enjoy the property. I would do it again, but if my wife and I happen to tire of the place we can sell it and be content with the knowledge that we've done a lot to improve the property. https://photos.smugmug.com/Other/Asb...DSC_0013-L.jpg https://photos.smugmug.com/Other/Asb...DSC_0015-L.jpg |
That place is beautiful Jacob .
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23 acres, mostly treed and trails, maybe 1-1/2 acres lawn. The kids cut the lawn with a 54" JD and they fight over their turn. The couple fields (say 5 acres) I bush hog once/twice a year with the big tractor, going to teach the 15yr/old boy to do it this year.
I know the edges look a little ragged but I only trim around the house, I might do the whole yard once a year. I used to have a 3 hole golf course, but the upkeep got old PDQ. To the OP's question would I do it again, yes, I absolutely hate the city. |
Very timely subject. My wife and I have been pondering this very subject given the fact that both our mowers, uh, children have graduated college and are no longer reliable slave labor ;)
Just mowing everything is a four hour event minimum unless we run two mowers, which I have. We mow the ditch lines as well. When the paddocks need to be mowed add another 2 1/2 hours. Mowing is in addition to the spraying, liming, fertilizing (safe stuff) and over seeding every year. We also have two horses and board another two. My wife and I have been talking to the Maryland Natural Resources folks about transitioning a lot of the farm to native plants and grasses. We are also budgeting for hired help. I would do it again with a much better understanding of the tools involved to manage the place. I would also have developed a better long term strategy, which is what we are doing now. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467554902.gif |
Never again. was fun at one point now its time to downsize. Better things to do than lookin after 28 acres and an old farm house. Gonna be 75 next b'day.
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[QUOTE=jwasbury;9184311]Primary home in NJ - virtually no lawn, almost 0 maintenance. Weekender country home in PA - 13.5 Acres, about 2-3 of "lawn" and the rest woods. Takes about 2 hours to cut the "lawn" area, then another .5-1 hour if I want to clean up all the tight spots with push mower/trimmer. I usually do those tight spots every other mow...looks good enough for me. In the early growing season the "lawn" needs cutting every week, but that lasts for about a month, then it can be done every other week.
That is a big house to keep clean. Dusting, vacuuming etc. in addition to the yard work. My wife and I agree that we keep the house as long as possible(which includes large pie shape lot). If one of us goes first prematurely then the one remaining can hire somebody if need be. OTOH a yard/acreage can keep you in shape!:) |
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We have a little more than 10 acres with...I guess around 3 acres that needs mowing (maybe more because it takes me a lot longer than most report here for a lawn that size). It is typical in size for my area...even small houses and mobile homes sit out in the middle of a field/pasture. Even with a big JD zero-turn it takes me most of a day to mow and trim. It rains enough that it needs it every week for much of the year. If I were retired, it might be different, but with a long work day and a very long commute, I am pretty exhausted on the weekend already and have other stuff to do. If I go on a short trip and come home...I dread coming back and trying to mow as it is so tall that I have to go over it a couple times (an all day job) before going back to work. I had thought to plant a garden and add to the landscaping...but just maintaining this takes too much time.
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About 1.5 hours to cut the grass. Would we do it again? You bet.:)http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467563542.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467563561.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467563576.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467563591.jpg |
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Cool place. |
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Yes it is cool in winter too! Too cold. |
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Regarding time to mow...helps to have good tools. JD 420 with a 60" cut eats a lot of grass relatively quickly: https://photos.smugmug.com/Other/Asb...DSC_6721-L.jpg |
Personally I need the space...my neighbors are half mile away. I would trade my old office workplace environment for being outside mowing and trimming any day.
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We have 10 acres in the country surrounded by corn/soybean/wheat fields with plenty of woods/trees interspersed. We mow about 3 acres, which includeds almost 1000' of road frontage ditches, and close to 1000' off the road in places. I view mowing time as a small price to pay for such a wonderful (neigbor free) country place. I mow with a John Deere 955 diesel 4x4 with foot control hydro, power steering, and a 72" mid mower, so it doesn't take long to take out large swaths of tall grass. I do all my trimming with roundup, and have a pushmower, but hardly ever use it....no string trimmer. We have black mulch around all the trees and landscaping to make it very easy to mow around things. At some point, this property will be become too much to handle by myself, but at 51 Y.O., i'm hoping that will be anouter 25 years.
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28 acres...... 1/2 of it woods. Neighbor hays one field. I bush hog another field every other year.
My wife mows around the house with a 21" self propelled push mower. Takes her about an hour. I mow 2 places either side of the driveway and down by the garage (about 1 &1/4 hours) with a tractor and 3 point hitch finish mower. Would I do it again........well I don't ever plan on moving but.... yup i'd do it again . http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467585889.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467585997.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467586170.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467586375.jpg |
18 acres a mile out of Los Angeles City limits. Most is canyons and brush. Illegal Gardner mows an acre or so.
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After an eternity of mowing my dad's lawn, and swearing I'd NEVER maintain a lawn, I stupidly decided to go buy a 5 acre property.
I think it all boils down to priorities. The house "was what it was" and that meant adopting a big lawn. In one sense, mowing the grass is a hassle and a big waste of time and money. On the other hand, I've lived on small plots too, in city settings, and in small suburban lots. They come with their own set of obstacles- HOA's, Neighbors, thieves, vandals, etc.. (This is all under the understanding that these are issues worthy of the "first world problems" thread:D Au naturale? Sure. I love wooded low maintenance lots. Living under a bunch of older trees that could drop through the house like knives though hot butter- not so much. BTDT. My last house had two neighbor's houses destroyed by trees falling. My own house had two "just" miss the house as they dropped in hurricanes. Luckily no one got killed. Even so- tree removal needs to be factored in the big picture of lawn maintenance. It comes down to level of commitment too- for example- An earlier post in this thread mentions planting lower maintenance plants. My wife is all into annuals. That's her gig. Me- perennials (if anything). I'm too busy trying to keep the jungle mowed. If we lived in a small lot, we'd probably spend the same amount of time keeping a smaller lot to a higher standard. One thing that has made acreage a breeze is a tow behind offset finish mower. My rig has a 10+ foot finish cut swath. I can finish the lawn in about 30- 45 minutes depending on how detailed I want to get. I love it, well- until I hit a stump last week and bent a spindle. Guess what I will be fixing tomorrow (another first world thread addition!) :D So yeah- lawn maintenance has the additional hassle of equipment upkeep. I read this thread tonight after wetsanding the tins on my older garden tractor! In conclusion, yeah- if it's on your terms, it can be fun and therapeutic. If it's a chore, its a chore, but something is going to grow. If not grass, something else.. crappy neighbors.. etc....http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467592802.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467592837.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1467592856.jpg |
I've got a suburban 20K sq ft lot 30 min from LA and 45 min from the beaches. And no, I don't have to commute!
But that is the minimum for me - and I know for most of you guys that's a postage stamp. But I have no neighbors that can look into my yard, and I also don't have to hear anyone. I pay $120 a month to mow and blow and do some minimal trimming, and I enjoy doing the rest. I can't imagine taking care of 10 acres, but then again, you probably wouldn't like living on my "postage stamp." To each their own. Good luck! |
I am the "lawn mowing guy".
Well sort of. I mow the lawns at my rentals as part of the deal. What it really is, is I get to keep an eye on the places. All the lawns are tiny so I've done half a dozen lawns in half a day. |
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