The land maintenance, non-chainsaw thread
ego is king in the e-powered territory. Brushless. Batteries all swap and range from 2.5 - 7.5 depending on needs.
Electric feed on whacker is great. More plastic on the mower than I’d like but 1.5 years in and it still looks new. Blower has stupid power (use it to blow snow off my driveway).
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The land maintenance, non-chainsaw thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by
old_newguy
Does anyone have a recommendation on a battery powered weed whacker and a push reel style mower? This is for a small yard, definitely don’t want to mess around with gas. Last weed whacker I had was corded and would like to avoid that.
I have a set of Makita 18V battery tools....
I have a battery powered black and decker 3 in 1. Basically a string trimmer that plugs into a little mowing deck. Perfect for my tiny and uneven yard. Mowing feels more like vacuuming. I tried, but my yard is too small for a reel mower to get enough momentum to make sense.
If a better brand made a similar device I’d buy it, but my 45 seconds of research came up empty. Honestly it’s worked great and I have no real complaints. It’s not the sturdiest thing, but it gets the job done.
BLACK+DECKER 3-in-1 Lawn Mower, String Trimmer and Edger, 12-Inch (MTC220) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00HH4K548...Z5HSHM4M2P3CMR
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The land maintenance, non-chainsaw thread
I found the right thread. We started doing small understory broadcast burns on our property during the dry winter. We live in a pondo pine/black oak forest, which is mostly full of fire adapted/dependent plants. We focused on surface fuels and duff, which is pretty deep. So deep that we don’t see much growing on our forest floor. We only have 1.6ac. The largest of the burns was only 1,000SF, which took about 4hrs, including prepping the little unit. I did them all by myself with occasional help from the kids, so I was very conservative on site prepping, what fuel I was burning, water nearby, downslope backing fire only, and wx conditions (especially wind). It’s SO much easier than blowing, raking, hauling, and disposing of the surface fuels. There are supposed to be a lot of ecological benefits, too, which I’m looking forward to experiencing. We’ll be burning most of the property next wet season when conditions allow. I would like to do some thinning and clean up before that time for more successful burns. Depending on how areas respond, we’ll probably do it every year or two after these “entry” burns.
Over 40ac of private property was burned last winter in my hood (on purpose). I volunteered about 9 hrs at a 9ac burn last week, which was a pretty cool community event.
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The land maintenance, non-chainsaw thread
I just looked it up. The 6” chipper that I rent is $175/day. Almost to the same cost. We have too many chip piles at the moment. last summer, meat bees made a nest in one pile. That kinda sucked.
On the 9ac broadcast burn that I worked last week, after the understory burn was done, we collected many of the larger unburned sticks (aka bones), and made small pile burns within our burn unit. Attention was paid to not be too close to trees trunks, stumps and stuff excluded in the burn unit, and the canopy. piles can burn hot compared the surface fuels of the broadcast burn. Burning in the black seems to work well.
I’ll be cutting and hauling to the transfer station later this month and next month.
In the dry CA winter, there were many escaped burn piles because the duff was super dry and smoldering under the piles (bad practice by the burner, IMO.) three escaped burn piles today in my general area that turned into understory or grass fires that required Calfire to extinguish. Sounds like structures and canopies were untouched (thankfully).
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