Lawn Mowing Techniques
Mowing your lawn is probably carried out more often than any other
job in the home garden. Correct lawn mowing will not only help keep
the look of your garden but will also help to keep the health of
your lawn.
As the season begins in spring
your lawn mowing will begin. These initial cuts should be completed
on a relatively high cut setting. As the season continues you can
gradually lower the cut to your required height. For normal lawns
the cut height may vary between 15mm up to 35mm and for the finest
lawns between 6mm up to 15mm.
The best stripes are created
with cylinder mowers where the lawn is cut in one direction only.
The heavier the roller the more defined a stripe will be achieved.
The best way to then achieve stripes up and down the garden is to
first cut around the borders to create a turning area. Once this
has been completed you start at one side of the lawn and cut up
and down the lawn overlapping the previous strip each time.
The frequency of your cutting
will depend largely on the weather. In normal condition mowing twice
a week will help keep your lawn in the best of conditions. However,
in really dry spells only once a week will be required. It can also
be a good idea to leave the clippings uncollected in these dry spells.
This will help retain the moisture within the lawn.
It is also important to raise
the level of the cut slightly again to help retain the moisture
in the lawn. The removal of clippings is generally important. To
leave clippings on the lawn will reduce aeration of the grass, encourages
worms and can cause disease. This is particularly so in damp conditions.
d shredding garden leaves is,
of course the most obvious. Gardeners love the vacuum function for
making mulch and compost out of grass and leaves. Used this way, blower-vacs
can reduce 16 bags of loosely packed leaves to one mulched blower
bag. This will make any gardeners life a little easier.
Blower-vacs are particularly
useful for clearing out leaves and debris when space is restricted,
such as behind garden sheds or other diffcult to reach areas of
the garden. With a special extension attachment, blower vacs are
also handy for "sweeping" out gutters, garages, and carports, not
to mention cleaning driveways or decks before sealing them. They're
also used to sweep pool decks and even dry off cars and their engines
after a wash.
The garden blower vac Two-stroke
engines are powerful for their weight and inexpensive to manufacture,
but these advantages are also disadvantages. They are inherently
dirtier and noisier garden tools. Blower vac Manufacturers such
as Echo utilize unique sound attenuation technology for the PB-46LN.
Others have designed larger mufflers, rubber-isolated engine mounts,
and spring-mounted handles. Some, like Husqvarna with its E-Tech
engine, have developed low-smoke oil and redesigned the combustion
chamber and muffler in order to reduce emissions. Both Honda and
Ryobi have designed smaller, quieter, and less polluting four-stroke
engines that will soon serve to power garden blower-vacs.
Recently electric blower-vacs
have started to appear. In response to concerns over the noise of
petrol-powered blower-vacs, corded electric models are now more
powerful than ever, some of them even surpassing their petrol-powered
brethren, and with less weight. The biggest drawback to these garden
blower vac units is that you're limited to 100 feet from the plug
socket, or the motor can be damaged. A few cordless battery-powered
blower-only models are also available, but they tend to be heavy
and have limited run times.
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