Clearing some land. PT lurking with grapple to stoke the FIRE

   / Clearing some land. PT lurking with grapple to stoke the FIRE #11  
Burning restricted to after 4pm? So the smoke blends into evening barbecue?

That is a new one. Thanks for sharing.

I agree that grapples seem to be way more popular now. Growing up, it seemed like there were lots of tractors with mechanically driven attachments, but very few with hydraulics, but that could just have been our less wealthy corner of the US.

All the best,

Peter
It's an old, but data driven, policy that's regionally accurate and has been effective.


"After 4 p.m., winds usually calm down and the relative humidity levels are on the increase, both of which reduce the potential for a debris fire or any outdoor open air fire to escape your control."
Frequently Asked Questions: Burning and the 4 p.m. Law
 
   / Clearing some land. PT lurking with grapple to stoke the FIRE
  • Thread Starter
#12  
Woodland, I am going to have to feed my little baby grapple alot of hardwoods so it can grow up and be half as beefy as your beast mode grapple!
 
   / Clearing some land. PT lurking with grapple to stoke the FIRE #13  
People burn leaves here. Lots of leaves. It's illegal, but they do it anyway. They mostly burn them at night because they get home from work and go out to rake and burn. Unfortunately, there's less to no breeze at night, so the smoke just hangs in the air. It's brutal. The smoke goes up from the fire and drops down half a block away and then just sits there like a cloud of tear gas. And the rub is, these people pay for leaf pickup in their taxes, yet for some reason they think that since their father burned leaves, they have to burn them as well. It's just goofy.
 
   / Clearing some land. PT lurking with grapple to stoke the FIRE #14  
People burn leaves here. Lots of leaves. It's illegal, but they do it anyway. They mostly burn them at night because they get home from work and go out to rake and burn. Unfortunately, there's less to no breeze at night, so the smoke just hangs in the air. It's brutal. The smoke goes up from the fire and drops down half a block away and then just sits there like a cloud of tear gas. And the rub is, these people pay for leaf pickup in their taxes, yet for some reason they think that since their father burned leaves, they have to burn them as well. It's just goofy.
Burning just requires raking and lighting the fire, leaf pickup requires raking and bagging or a bagger on a lawn mower (More money) may be why. :unsure:
 
   / Clearing some land. PT lurking with grapple to stoke the FIRE #15  
Nope. Leaf pickup only requires raking it to the street. You rake, the county (a vendor with a contract now) picks them up with vacuum trucks. You already paid for it in your property taxes, so every time you burn leaves, you're burning your own money.
 
   / Clearing some land. PT lurking with grapple to stoke the FIRE
  • Thread Starter
#16  
burn baby burn, it's a ......
 
   / Clearing some land. PT lurking with grapple to stoke the FIRE #17  
Yes, I don't get it either. And leaf litter makes great compost, though I admit it decomposes faster if you run them through a lawn mower or shredder first.

All the best, Peter
 

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