Larro Darro
Super Member
That old Craftsman mower has been with me since the early '90s, and if I took the time to hose it off, still looks brand new. On the outside at least. It cut grass once a week at the last house during the summer growing season (grass stops growing during the short winter days here in California, just like the rest of the country). But back then the sprinkler system kept it nice and green, and I even got into the habit of fertilizing it a few times a year. I think I may have cleaned under the deck once or twice when I first started using it, but not much came out and I stopped. Haven't even looked under there since moving to the sticks five years ago, but then it only gets used a few times during the spring each year. During the drought I've stopped watering the grass all together, and now it's as brown, sorry gold, as the surrounding hillsides. And I've just about made up my mind to replace the small lawn with drought tolerant shrubs and ground cover, dotted with boulders and finished off with decomposed granite, a gold colored sand. At that point I'll probably give the mower deck one last cleaning before putting it on Craig's List, formally ending my grass cutting career. I'll still mow the meadows away from the house, but that's a sit down job on the tractor, and if I time it right it's a once a year thing. Does that still count as mowing? And no, I don't clean the deck on the bush hog, either.
Larro, I've had mixed results leaving so called maintenance chargers hooked up to batteries all the time. They're supposed to be smart enough to not hurt the battery, but some batteries still don't like it. Last week a buddy told me he keeps his chargers on a 7 day timer, and only turns them on once a week. That's been working pretty well for him, so I'm going to try it, too. Another of my friends takes a bulb out of the garage door opener, replacing it with a screw in socket. He connects his charger to that so it only comes on for ten minutes or so each time the garage door opens. That also seems to work, though I'm not sure how well I like the idea of stringing extension cords across the ceiling. Either way, think your mom could get into the habit of leaving her rider plugged in all the time?:confused3:
I bet you will be glad when you can retire your mower. I cut grass for money for over 35 years, so I have never really cared about my yard grass at home. I worked yards when I was a kid, hay and pastures when a young man, sports turf when I came home from the Navy. I like golf course work much more than baseball fields. As past times go, ball players {and their parents} just don't seem to have as much fun as golfers. I was still doing hay, pasture and yards, plus the grounds at the Civic Center for the next 15 years or so. Then we got prison labor at work, and I stopped farming, so it was just yards for a few years. Once Margie got elected and started making good money, I didn't look for new yards as my customers died or went in the old folks home. Margie's brother was my last paying customer and he has been dead about 5 years. Now I just try to keep the grass cut right in front of the house, and in the back where the dog is. That is only about an acre each. The rest of the yard {about 4 acres} is white with the blooms of wild Astor right now. I never cut it until they are done blooming. And then only three or four times a year.
Her charger is 20 odd yeas old. I might could figure out what's the problem with it, but she has got her money's worth out of it. It's a regular charger, not the trickle kind. As bad as Mamma hates spending money, she has threatened to go buy a new mower if we can't keep hers running. Since Sister and I always inherit her old mowers, I just don't see my motivation to hurry on this job



