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Leaf blowing. Tell me it gets better
I recently had my back yard redone. The day my landscaper finished is the same day that some crazy strong winds whipped up. The very same winds that helped light my hometown on fire. My yard was spotless. Now it looks like the trees vomited in my yard. It’s a foot deep in the corners.
I’ve been busy. Work. Today? I pulled out my POS corded leaf blower. Wow. It is challenging. I had leaves going everywhere. Eventually I got it blown to the part of the yard we built for my dog’s bathroom. It was easy to rake from there. I’m not ready to hire a weekly yard guy. Does it get easier? I’s Clear I need a cordless blower. Gas? One of the 80v battery rigs?
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Registered
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 4,612
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Get a leaf blower that converts to a mulcher.
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Almost Banned Once
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"Does it get easier? " Not really... You just have to stay on top of it.
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- Peter |
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Registered
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Clinton, NJ
Posts: 12,782
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From experience, blowing leaves is much like herding cats.
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______________________________ Dave 1969 911T Coupe 1972 911E Targa |
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Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Socal
Posts: 2,384
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I’m lucky as I have a couple of guys that do it for me .
The pool guy comes on Thursday , and makes it spotless . Then “mo and blo” come on Friday and blow a load of sh@t in the pool ![]() The last couple of weeks , I’ve caught them and told them not to come in the back yard . I’m thinking of buying my own leaf blower from Home Depot then I can simply blow all the sh@t into the pool myself .... |
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Cars & Coffee Killer
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: State of Failure
Posts: 32,246
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First house with a tiny yard had four 25 year old maples and one ash of the same age. I was a young twenty something homeowner with no money.
The first year, I bought a rake. From the end of September until the beginning of November, it took me 8 hours to rake every week. I had to muck the gutters several times by hand consuming a further 8 hours. The second year, I bought a small, Walmart-quality gas leaf blower. I began by blowing off the roof and gutters and it only took about three hours each week. A few years after that, I bought a tow-behind leaf sweeper for my neighbor's riding lawnmower. I had assumed lawn mowing duties when the husband died. I blew off the roof, gutter and the other areas the lawnmower couldn't reach, and I could do BOTH yards in an hour. My recommendation? Get a good, gas-powered leaf blower. If you want to do it fast, get a yard vacuum, but they are $$$. https://www.amazon.com/Billy-Goat-KV600-Litter-Vacuum/dp/B00EAIPCWY?SubscriptionId=AKIAILSHYYTFIVPWUY6Q&tag=duckduckgo-ffsb-20&linkCode=xm2&camp=2025&creative=165953&creativeASIN=B00EAIPCWY
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Some Porsches long ago...then a wankle... 5 liters of VVT fury now -Chris "There is freedom in risk, just as there is oppression in security." |
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Posts: 30,438
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Quote:
I have two powerful 2-cycle backpacks (one Echo, one Stihl) that produce hurricane force winds and will move some leaves...night & day difference. This mornng I dropped $1700 for a Cyclone Rake....it's gonna help a bit...I hope. Naw...it don't get easier...you get smarter... Do ya know anything about bamboo....see, I was thinkin' about planti... ![]() Last edited by KFC911; 10-21-2017 at 08:17 PM.. |
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Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 17,357
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No it doesn't get easier and only gets worst. I have no neighbor in the back so its all canyon (thanks goodness its all down hill). I have about 3/8 acre of trees and brush that belong to me. My neighbor's got these huge fooking trees that like to rain leaves by autumn, so when the wind god decides to exercise his lungs, its a huge mess. I got so tired of cleaning back there when my kids were small. They play on the deck so my supreme commander demanded that it stays clean. that weren't happenning. I clean it by lunch then its all over by night fall, and if it blows, its covered the next morning. Finally I decided to hire a mo and blow guy that does the other houses. 50 bucks, he comes twice a month to keep everything under control.
Last edited by look 171; 10-21-2017 at 10:36 PM.. |
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You do not have permissi
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: midwest
Posts: 39,846
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Use whatever tool works best:
Wait until a completely dry day, blow them all into a single pile, rake + rake/snowshovel into the compost bin, or onto a tarp to drag into a corner. |
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Registered
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Linn County, Oregon
Posts: 48,515
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It gets easier when all the leaves are done falling. Pains me to look at my yard right now. Storm supposed to stop Monday...it'll take me a couple of days. Cindy argues I should hire it done, but even at age 73, it's a male pride thing.
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"Now, to put a water-cooled engine in the rear and to have a radiator in the front, that's not very intelligent." -Ferry Porsche (PANO, Oct. '73) (I, Paul D. have loved this quote since 1973. It will remain as long as I post here.) |
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Registered ConfUser
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Waterlogged
Posts: 23,479
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Stihl gas blower. I keep one in the yard and one in the garage. A PITA Oct-Jan. But a good blower is worth having. A POS blower will make you crazy. Also makes drying the car and motorcycles after a bath much quicker.
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Mike “I wouldn’t want to live under the conditions a person could get used to”. -My paternal grandmother having immigrated to America shortly before WWll. |
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Dog-faced pony soldier
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Don’t bother with it until there is NOTHING left on the trees or you’ll end up just frustrating yourself and redoing work a dozen times. Of course this means you’ll have a window of about three hours between when that happens and when it rains for five weeks straight and then immediately freezes, encapsulating the leaves on the ground in an impenetrable layer of ice until spring (that’s what seems to happen here every single year) but at least you won’t have wasted the effort!
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Registered
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I agree it's a pain. We have a LOT of leaves and over the years we have discovered & accumulated the best tools to do the job. We have wide rakes, narrow rakes, a battery powered blower, and a gas blower.
And this to collect all the leaves in. ![]() It is admittedly a piece of crap, but it saves a lot of time. My mower has a bagger attachment that connects to the vacuum and sucks up huge volumes of leaves. By the end of leaf season we have a compost pile 5 feet tall by 10 feet wide by 30 feet long. ![]() These are very handy, and at $5, worth every penny.
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. Last edited by wdfifteen; 10-22-2017 at 03:21 AM.. |
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Brew Master
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Like I said in another thread.. leaf blowers are a bit deceptive in advertising. Look for the one with the highest CFM as that's where the work gets done. A lot of the cheaper leaf blowers want you to focus on how many MPH they generate. I use a Husqvarna 150BT backpack blower 251 MPH 692CFM. I can move 3/4 to 1-1/2" river rock around with it and frequently do because that's what in our flowerbeds. I can easily clean stones off my concrete approach to my garage. I do have a small battery powered blower by Greenworks that's decent but a toy in comparison. I can move things with my Husky at idle that the battery powered blower will struggle with.
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Quote:
The soil in our garden area was heavy clay 10 years ago. If the clay was wet it stuck together like glue, and if it was dry it was like cement. After about a decade of adding a little compost to the clay every year, the soil now looks like this. I can dig down 6" with my hands, wet or dry. ![]() The 2016 compost pile is in the foreground, it has shrunk by well over 90% as it decomposed. The beginning of the 2017 pile is on the left. What is left of 2014 and 2015 is in the background. It will get distributed this week to make room for the rest of the 2017 leaves. ![]()
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Posts: 30,438
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Quote:
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Too much whining going on in this thread. As my sister would say deal with it. I have a Torro handheld blower mulcher and does a good job in the yard.
Just think of it. Nature gives you beautiful leaves on the trees which help the trees grow. Picking up leaves is good exercise. If you don't like yard work you can always live in a high rise condo. And then you will have something to complain about..... ![]() ![]() |
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Posts: 30,438
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Brew Master
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Another option is to get a good mulching blade for your mower. I have a 2 acre lot. I have 7 maple trees on my house lot and nothing but arborvitae on the other acre. when the leaves start coming down heavily or I get behind with the backpack blower, I use one of the pull type lawn sweepers. The rest of the time I'm using my backpack blower and the wind to my favor. But I don't have to pick my leaves up, the owner of the farm around me tells me to just blow them into his field and he lets me put all my grass clippings in the field as well.
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I went lawn-less. Just plant/flowers beds covered with mulch. (Smallish wood Chips).
Which exasperates the situation
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