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[email protected] hallerb@aol.com is offline
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Default Removing Snow From Driveway - Best Long Term Solution?

On Feb 7, 11:27�am, Harry K wrote:
On Feb 6, 8:52�pm, aemeijers wrote:





Harry K wrote:
On Feb 5, 4:08 pm, HerHusband wrote:
SW Washington state. Generally a mild climate, but we're at roughly
1500' elevation so we get more snow than most people around here. For
example, we had 14" of snow Saturday, but just 2-3 miles down the hill


(snip)


As for the plow berm. �If you can't get right at it, even a big gas
blower is almost helpless faced with a huge berm of plowed snow that
has been allowed to settle. �They tend to pack down to a dense, if not
frozen, mass.


Sore chuckle. I, a couple of hours ago, came close to damaging my
middle-age office-worker body clearing the wall of ice the plow guys
left blocking my driveway. Not deep, only about an 8-inch snowfall over
an inch of ice, so the dam was only about 18" high, and maybe 2 feet
wide. But being almost above freezing, it was totally waterlogged, and
it felt like shoveling wet concrete. I knew it would be frozen solid by
morning, so ignoring it was not an option. I was getting sudden flashes
of how they used to clear ice jams on rivers, to avoid taking out
bridges- dynamite. Too bad you can't buy that in the hardware stores
around here any more... :^/


aem sends...


Looking at mch the same problem this morning. �It was predicted but I
went to bed praying they were wrong. �Snow/wind started about 6 pm
with the snow coming horizontal. �I shoveled a path twice to the
woodshed for wood. They said it would turn warm and rain by morning.
It did. �I am now faced with a 100'x30' drive covered with drifts and
a plow berm. �All wet. �After breakfast it will on the 'blower and
work away at it.

Harry K- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


do note running a snowblower is nearly as much work as
shoveling...........