Thread: shovelling snow
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[email protected] angelica...@yahoo.com is offline
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Default shovelling snow

On Thursday, February 18, 2021 at 9:07:32 PM UTC-5, Clare Snyder wrote:
On Thu, 18 Feb 2021 08:25:30 -0800 (PST), "
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 17, 2021 at 5:17:29 PM UTC-5, Oliver George wrote:
On 2/17/21 2:03 PM, wrote:
On Wednesday, February 17, 2021 at 1:32:45 PM UTC-5, micky wrote:
BTW. after all these years, I have a new improved way of shoveling the
sidewalk, that's faster, better, and takes less effort.

The whole word "shoveling" seems like the wrong word now because surely
shovel ling meant putting the shovel under the snow and lifting it and
throwing it to the side.

The last two times, I used a spade, with a flat end. Just put it end
down on the sidewalk and slide it to the side. Lift it an inch or two
and do the next row of snow.

No lifting the shovel or the snow, no throwing it, and for a guy with
breathing problems some times (well, only when I'm working hard), I can
do four times as much without getting running out of breath. 60 feet
instead of 15.

I hate to break it to you, but that's how all of us old farts shovel snow.

Of course, after a few snowfalls without a thaw in between, one does have
to lift the snow up over the piles of snow at the edge of the sidewalk.

ISTR in 2013 we got 60 inches of snow over the course of the winter, with
precious little thawing until spring. Even the snowblower was having a
hard time throwing snow up over the piles next to the driveway.

Cindy Hamilton

What kind of snowflake blower do you have? My little 19hp JD can hit the 7kV primary over my driveway.


In 2013 we had some sort of Toro. A single-stage jobbie with those rubber flappers.
We have some colored and stamped concrete that we don't want to tear up.

We replaced it this year with a Honda. I think it's this one:
https://www.amazon.com/Honda-Equipment-HS720AA-Single-Stage-Control/dp/B00P4QORJK

Cindy Hamilton

We call those snow throwers - or power shovels. The work good for
loose snow - not bad for wet - but no good for frozen packed snow or
snow with a heavy ice coating. Sometimes you NEED wheel drive or track
drive to motivate the thing.


I generally get out and use the thing right away, so no frozen packed snow.
Haven't had to deal with a heavy ice coating on top of snow. That's pretty
rare here; probably something about the way the Great Lakes affect the
weather.

Cindy Hamilton