Waiting for the rain
Jun. 15th, 2006 09:49 pmActually, there's none forecast until probably tomorrow afternoon, but right now it feels like the sky will burst at any moment. Cloudy, humid, still air. You expect to hear thunder at any second.
What could have been a peaceful afternoon was anything but. Continuous lawnmowers. I swear, in summer one never gets to hear the birds for the lawnmowers. I'll bet they are producing more greenhouse gas than all the cars and trucks in the county. And all for silly appearances, because everyone thinks they should or that they have to.
I'm so tempted to take a bunch of sheep down the road, tie one on each lawn, and leave a note saying "Give your lawnmower and my ears a break, please."
What could have been a peaceful afternoon was anything but. Continuous lawnmowers. I swear, in summer one never gets to hear the birds for the lawnmowers. I'll bet they are producing more greenhouse gas than all the cars and trucks in the county. And all for silly appearances, because everyone thinks they should or that they have to.
I'm so tempted to take a bunch of sheep down the road, tie one on each lawn, and leave a note saying "Give your lawnmower and my ears a break, please."
no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 03:08 am (UTC)*turns off the lawnmower*
What?
*ducks*
^_^
no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 03:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 04:42 am (UTC)Makes me almost sad that I own a lawnmower, myself. But I'm in a suburb, and you know the rules in suburbs. <sigh>
no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 07:00 am (UTC)I don't like the polen that lawnmowers throw up.
Riding Lawnmower
Date: 2006-06-16 07:47 am (UTC)Hey, I'll come mow yer lawn free of charge and give ya a ride at the same time. Like any good equine. :)
Imperator
no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 10:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 10:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 10:22 am (UTC)One reason I get up so early is to avoid that stuff. But here it doesn't matter whether it's Saturday, Sunday, or Tuesday. It seems like there's always a mower running.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 10:26 am (UTC)Where I live, everyone has at least five acres of land, often more. That's a ridiculous amount to try to keep pruned so it looks like a deer park, but they insist on trying it. The whole thing is about status symbols and trying to look like English country homes of the 18th century, but they don't even know the background. They just do it, like ants or lemmings under the compulsion of instinct.
Re: Riding Lawnmower
Date: 2006-06-16 10:29 am (UTC)Tess has been our primary lawn trimmer the last few years, but she's still not allowed free grazing. July, the vet says. That means we're going to have to run the mower ourselves soon. Usually we do it once every two weeks or so this time of year, and by July we can pretty much stop.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 10:52 am (UTC)Its illegal to neglect to mow your lawn?!
no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 11:17 am (UTC)In many additional places, though no local laws regulate lawn heights, there are deed covenants and restrictions (like your "no livestock") that apply directly. That was the joke in Over the Hedge where the lawn nazi calls someone to complain that she measured their grass and it was 2.5 inches tall.
Where I live, though, the zoning is agricultural. No one can threaten me for not mowing, and I only do it for practical reasons and far fewer times a year than most of my neighbors.
The American obsession with trimmed lawns really does go back to 18th century England where they were a status symbol. In brief, having an evenly cropped sward with no cows in evidence meant that you were wealthy enough to waste land on grazing deer instead of cattle. So it was a sign of wealth. When country landlords were no longer quite as wealthy in the 19th century, they invented lawn mowing in order to keep up the appearances. Before that time, grass was only mowed in order to make hay of it.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 03:33 pm (UTC)Lawnmowers don't generally bother me much, as it's a fairly constant drone. I'm surrounded by computers all the time, which produce a not dissimilar sound (though quieter and a higher frequency). Loud parties and the neighbor's stupid insomniac dog yapping all night are much bigger annoyances.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 04:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-16 06:13 pm (UTC)But they don't like it when I sleep on Monday morning. Something about me needing to get work done. Either that, or my snoring keeps the office awake.
Lawn mowing fetish
Date: 2006-06-16 08:39 pm (UTC)Years ago, when I left Southern California, I thought that would be the last I had seen of lawn mowing. Uh... no.
Since then I have lived all over the US of A and all over the world and it the same world-over. Lawn mowing.
It is a major industry with very expensive ride-on mowers that can turn on a dime and have lots of horsepower and huge baggers with trailers to catch the clippings and leaves. Every where I look there are lawns being mowed, often of many-acre size.
I agree and understand about feeling it makes one seem to appear wealthy... the same thing with buying white or silver cars. That used to be something only the rich had.. white or silver Rolls Royces or Lincolns or Cadillacs but now it is apparent the fakery has taken over the minds of the commoner.
The part about lawn mowing that amazes me the most is that so many people around here mow it much too often and waay too short. I mean I can drive along and see what appear to be beautiful green lawns in perfect order and the next day it is being mowed almost to the dirt and now looks brown and ugly. That is the part I do not get.
We mow when it gets to the point it will soon become a much bigger project/job due to the sheer height and if it rains, forget it. If you simply let it go, very shortly you will be living back in the woods since it is not only the grass but trees and shrubs and weeds and a myriad of plants getting too tall to mow any more with a conventional mower.
Still, there is much too much lawn mowing around here in Michigan and I know it is going on all over the world. Of course we know that grasses of all kinds comprise like eighty something percent of all plant life on Earth so maybe if we just keep on cutting it there will be no more animal life... er... oh, another thread entirely I suppose.
I remember folks in Southern California who would asphault pave their front yards or have their new carpeting installed on the ceiling to keep it from getting dirty, etc. etc. etc. so...
I often wonder who IS the most intellegent life form on this planet.
Imperator
Re: Lawn mowing fetish
Date: 2006-06-17 03:38 am (UTC)Yes, that's the really weird thing about mowing. People cut all that grass off, and throw it away. Often pay to have it carried away. Then they pay out more money for "mulch" to put down in their flower beds and gardens. Same with the fallen leaves in autumn.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-17 10:05 am (UTC)