FormerHangie
En-Route
So, what I hear is you are wanting to hire Ashely to mow the lawn for you and help her with her figure....
That's an interesting idea, but I don't think I have enough money to pay her to cut my grass. As far as helping her with her figure, I'd say she's doing quite well on her own.
Although pricey, those electric roomba mowers look interesting. Because it can be used to mow the lawn every few days, the lawn doesn't get thick or deep. I believe that it can handle irregular lawns shapes.
I've always wondered if they got stolen often.
Maybe this is because I'm still relatively young and my legs work but for push type mowers I've always preferred it as basic as possible... the less features there are on a push mower the lighter it is. I'd rather push/pull it up and down the rows as quick as possible and be done. Self propelled adds a whole bunch of weight and complication and besides most of them don't go very fast.
I just buy one of the cheapest ones for sale at wal-mart/sams/whatever home improvement store. Better yet would be something old enough not to have the crappy plastic carburetors that you can't take apart and clean but those are getting harder to find.
It was a struggle at age 40 to push the mower up the hill on what was then Bermuda grass, which is thinner. A mower I buy now I hope to be using until age 70, and these hills aren't getting any flatter.
What is a lawnmower? For that matter, what is a lawn? When we relandscaped our yard about 15 years ago what little lawn we had went away, and so did our lawnmower. The lawn we had would fill one catcher bag when I cut the grass. Now I just pull more weeds.
Um, it's a space covered in grass?
This is my preferred model of self-propelled lawnmower:
View attachment 86553
If you have one of these organic power units cluttering up the house and eating your food anyway, might as well get some use out of your investment.
Once I was in fourth grade, my father's grass cutting days were over. I have girls, they don't cut grass.
Just out of curiosity, why do you bag instead of mulch? With a good mulching mower, I have yet to see a yard that you can tell there is cut grass on it. And the compost will allow you to quit or skimp on fertilizer.
Most warm season grasses have a good bit of silica in their leaves and don't compost well. Zoysia, because of its dense growth habit, tends to develop thatch. When I had a fescue lawn to maintain, I did mulch to good effect, but wouldn't do that with a warm season grass.