Showing posts with label Yard Work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yard Work. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Yard Cleanup, Mulch and Lawn Prep


It’s that time of year again to cleanup the yard, spread the bark mulch and fertilize the lawn. Spring came early this year by several weeks. On average the daily temperatures have been 10 degrees higher during the month of March which has caused some of the trees to bloom and the ground flowers to pop.

Tulips and crocuses have come out a little earlier as well as the buds on the flowering trees. Unfortunately, last night we had a hard frost which may have killed off some of the flowers. Hopefully, the green leaves will soon replace the buds and the trees will quickly fill in. (The flowers stayed on my trees and are blooming.)

I started to cleanup around the bushes surrounding my house and wondered where all the dry leaves came from. There were tons of dry oak and maple leaves stuffed in all the nooks and crannies behind bushes and in the outside corners of the house. Where did they all come from? I must have raked out a zillion piles last fall and they’re all back again. Of course the wind helps by blowing all the leaves from adjacent house lots right into my yard. It’s like my yard is the neighborhood funnel for all the wind debris.  You can see some photos at the link ….  https://plus.google.com/photos/108806068200291783388/albums/5727349337401685841?authkey=CJyF1pew84HQzAE

I generally rake out all the leaves into piles and then mulch them with my push mower with a rear bagger. I then dump the bagger into a compost pile that makes good soil in a few months. However, you need to add water and green clippings to the compost pile with some lime and turn it a few times to get a good result.

After all the leaves and loose debris are cleaned out, I then cut a clean edge with an edging spade around all the flower beds and bushes before adding a fresh coat of bark mulch.  I like using the brownish hemlock mulch rather than the red-dyed pine mulch.  I normally spread about 6 yards of mulch around the house, bushes, flower gardens and yard trees. As a general rule of thumb a yard of mulch will cover about 100 square feet and three inches thick.  I bought my mulch at Eric’s Greenhouse in Reading, MA for about $47.00 a yard delivered. I then needed some more and picked it up myself with my utility trailer.

At a slow pace, I can generally edge a thirty square foot area, rake it clean and spread the mulch in about one hour. At my age, I only spend about three hours a day working in the yard usually sprinkled with a few rest breaks and drinking plenty of water. For those who may want to count calories, general yard work burns off about 500 calories per hour.

My next chore is to prepare the lawn. During some years there is a lot of dead grass and thatch which needs to be raked out before adding fertilizer. You can do it by hand for small lots or machine if the lawn is larger. I have a half acre lot which is mostly grass so I use the riding lawn mower with a dethatching tool attached.  I generally drag the dethatcher around the yard and allow the tines to pull out all the dead grass. I then use the riding lawnmower with a double bagger and suck up all the debris. I then empty the yard debris into the compost pile.

Lastly, I add the fertilizer to the lawn with a Scotts drop spreader. I have tried different brands of fertilizer and found that they all work about the same. Scotts is usually the most expensive, then Pennington and then Vigoro. This year I bought the Vigoro Fertilizer with Crab Grass Preventer.  The 15,000 square foot bags cost about $45.00 at Home Depot and I use about three bags to cover most of my lawn. I then check the garden hoses for leaks, put in new washers and tighten connections.

I don’t water the lawn much and let mother-nature take care of it most of the time. In Wilmington where I live there is still a water ban where you can only water with a hand held hose before 9 AM and after 5 PM.  As you may remember, I also have a vegetable garden that is watered with a rain barrel drip irrigation system that helps with water conservation.

Comments Always Welcome…..  markryan82@comcast.net

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Getting The Yard Ready (Spring Is Here !)

Spring is a beautiful time of year. The birds start singing, trees flower and the days are warmer. To help mother nature, we cleanup the yard, rake the leaves and twigs, till the garden and flower beds and rejuvenate the lawn. To help the flower beds requires cutting new edges and putting down fresh bark mulch. To help the lawn requires dethatching the dead grass and raking up the debris. Afterwards you fertilize with weed control and hope it rains enough to keep the grass healthy. Where I live in Wilmington, MA there are water restrictions with only hand held watering hoses before 9AM and after 5PM.

Before using the lawn tractor to dethatch the lawn, I took it out of the shed and put back the battery which I take out for winter storage. I then changed the oil, oil filter, gas filter and spark plug. This year, I also had to replace the spark plug wire clip that rusted and broke off. See photos at the link below……
http://picasaweb.google.com/markryan312/Lawnmower141609

I also changed the oil on two lawnmowers and a snow blower while I had the time. You can get rid of the old oil by returning it to a recycle center or wait for your town to have a recycling day. See the web link below to find places that are near you …… http://earth911.com/

Next, I hooked up the utility trailer to get some bark mulch at the garden center. After hooking it up with a trailer hitch, I noticed the tail lights didn’t work. Could it be just a new bulb or were there wiring problems. After replacing a bulb the lights still didn’t work. I then used a wire tester at different places to see if there was a break in the wiring. You can also use a multimeter. It turned out that the wire connector from the trailer to the car was defective. One of the connecting plugs rusted and broke off. I bought a 4-Wire replacement kit at Walmart but found the original trailer wiring had 5 wires going into a 4-wire plug. I looked up the wire diagram online and saw that the brown wire went to both the right and left running lights of the trailer. This is why 5 wires went into a 4-wire connector (1 yellow, 1 green, 1 white and 2 connected brown). See wire diagram at the link below …..
http://www.accessconnect.com/trailer_wiring_diagram.htm

You can also see photos of the trailer wire replacement at the link below ….
http://picasaweb.google.com/markryan312/TrailerLights42409

I’m glad that Spring only comes once a year !

Send comments to: markryan82@comcast.net