Showing posts with label mowing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mowing. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Getting high on grass

(Not my actual lawn)
When it comes to lawn care, there are two types of homeowners: those who pay others to do the work; and masochists.

I came to this realization one recent Monday morning, following a Sunday of yard work, when I could barely raise my arms and my legs felt like I was walking in quicksand. Yet I couldn't stop admiring the lines in my freshly cut grass nor thinking about what I would do differently next time.

That I would develop a green pinky (I'm trying to stay humble and earn my green thumb) kind of surprised me. The first time I mowed the lawn at our house was the first time I mowed a lawn in my entire life. My mother did the mowing when I was growing up; she would not let anyone touch her lawnmower. If we came back from the beach on a Sunday at 2:30 p.m., she would be mowing by approximately 2:33. It could be 90 degrees, and the lawn looked like a parched putting green because it hadn't rained in 20 days, and she would be pushing that mower.

My wife and I lived in an apartment and then in a townhouse with a postage-stamp-sized front lawn a neighbor graciously cut for us when he cut his own. So when we bought our house, it was finally my turn. On the recommendation of my cousin, I bought an electric lawnmower and trimmer. I assembled them in my basement and charged both batteries. I read the instruction manual and watched a few videos online for best practices.

And then I let everything sit in my basement because it was the middle of February. This proved problematic a couple months later, during the first warm weekend of the year, when I needed to start mowing and had not recharged the battery. It took almost a full day that first time, but by sundown, our lawn was freshly shorn. I felt a tremendous sense of accomplishment.

But here's what I didn't realize about your lawn in the springtime: IT DOESN'T STOP GROWING. Between the rain and the fertilizer, the grass is like a boy going through puberty. And, much like that teenager, I realized pretty soon I'd be whacking much more frequently than I anticipated.

Now, I'm obsessing over the weekend weather forecasts. I sulked one Saturday night when a rain shower passed by, fretting how it would impact the next day's scheduled mow. I'm experimenting with different cut heights for different parts of the lawn, from the marsh-like growth near the back of the yard to that annoying strip of grass between the sidewalk and the street. I observe my neighbors cutting their lawn and note their technique.

But I also see who is behind the lawnmower. There are boys, all arms and legs, fighting to maneuver the machine. There are dads in jeans on a leisurely stroll, pushing mowers older than I am. There's the guy wearing noise-canceling headphones so large it looks like he took a wrong turn from the airport tarmac. The hum of the lawnmower becomes the soundtrack of suburbia on a sunny spring afternoon.

"Most of the people in my mom's group say they hire someone to mow their lawn," my wife told me one day, matter-of-factly.

I was not sure if that was a statement or a hint.

"Well, most guys in the neighborhood don't know what they're missing," I said.

That's when it hit me why I took to mowing the lawn. When you have an-almost-3-year-old who is potty training at her own leisurely pace, when you're a month away from Baby No. 2 and all that means for everyone, when you have demands at work and just the general uncertainties of life, it's satisfying to have a defined goal and a task you can complete and see the results immediately.

The two hours of alone time also is pretty nice.