Dear Luke Browning, I have just filled in your latest questionaires, I have to admit I have the smallest lawn in the U.K. I think you should have asked about the size of the lawn and if there is any slope on it as that does affect the mowing 'experience'.
thank you for your advice, there are many questions i would like to have asked. I didnt want to make it too long that people didnt have time to answer fully and i was restricted to the amount of questions i could ask without purchasing an account.
The questionnaire doesn't really suit my circumstances, because the only lawns that I mow are other people's, and I use their mowers. It's likely that there are other professional gardeners on this board who might wish to answer, with the benefit of their wider experiences with different machines in different circumstances and with different priorities. Interested?
I mentioned earlier about liking the idea of going back to manual equipment in the garden, not scissors or a scythe Joe, but something simple and non polluting. I was born in the fifties and have nostalgia for those Sundays when you would hear the gentle wirring of mowers and clip clipping of neigbours trimming their privet along with the smells of new mown grass.
Nowadays, even though many people have pocket handkerchief size lawns, my daughter included, they spend ages getting their electric mowers out and putting them away to do a five minute job. Why not start a renaissance in mowing and bring in a beautifully engineered push mower? At a time when we're supposedly threatened with an obesity epidemic the excercise would be a whole lot healthier and cheaper than gym membership and we might even enjoy peaceful Sundays once more.
I can really appreciate that this solution would not be for everyone, least of all professional gardeners like Joe, but might it just take off?
I think it's a great ambition, Carly, but it would demand a considerable change of direction from the manufacturers, and they would need to take the public with them if they were not to be left with a warehouse full of unwanted mowers, however well-engineered.
I bought my daughter an electric mower for about £50 from B&Q to do her little squares of lawn front and back, and I doubt if a push one would be cheaper. And I can cut her privet hedge to perfection in about five minutes with the machine.
She is of a generation that prefers an electric gadget, and she prefers zumba to gardening. I was brought up push-mowing with a Qualcast, but I'm not sure there's any way back.
Ha ha Joe, you hit the nail on the head there " I can cut her privet hedge to perfection in about five minutes with the machine." Who needs electical power if you have parent power
Ok, maybe I'm the preverbial cockeyed optimist but with the growing green movement I'd like to see someone try to bring back manual mowers, maybe brought up to date in cool colours, (check out what they're doing to jazz up shopping trolleys). My experience of buying electric lawnmowers is that they may be cheap but can't be repaired when they break down so just have to be replaced.We live in such a throw away society - apologies for being a grumpy old woman!
No apology necessary Carly! (By the way, she's a teacher, so spends half the weekend on school work, and most of her kids are pre-verbal.) Good luck with the campaign, I'm not against it, but the practicalities and the economy may be. Necessity is usually the mother of invention, so we'll see how things go - if we live long enough.
My response to heavy, clogging, noisy machines which ripped rather than cut the grass? Dug up the grass and grew vegetables instead! Much more rewarding.
Posts
I have compiled a questionaire about my re-design and i would be very thankful if any of you could complete it.
It is made up of two parts
Part 1 http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/9P3FVNP
Part 2 http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/DVZYCBN
Thank you very much
Luke
Dear Luke Browning, I have just filled in your latest questionaires, I have to admit I have the smallest lawn in the U.K. I think you should have asked about the size of the lawn and if there is any slope on it as that does affect the mowing 'experience'.
thank you for your advice, there are many questions i would like to have asked. I didnt want to make it too long that people didnt have time to answer fully and i was restricted to the amount of questions i could ask without purchasing an account.
Thank you very much
Luke,
The questionnaire doesn't really suit my circumstances, because the only lawns that I mow are other people's, and I use their mowers. It's likely that there are other professional gardeners on this board who might wish to answer, with the benefit of their wider experiences with different machines in different circumstances and with different priorities. Interested?
I've just completed the questionaire Luke.
I mentioned earlier about liking the idea of going back to manual equipment in the garden, not scissors or a scythe Joe, but something simple and non polluting. I was born in the fifties and have nostalgia for those Sundays when you would hear the gentle wirring of mowers and clip clipping of neigbours trimming their privet along with the smells of new mown grass.
Nowadays, even though many people have pocket handkerchief size lawns, my daughter included, they spend ages getting their electric mowers out and putting them away to do a five minute job. Why not start a renaissance in mowing and bring in a beautifully engineered push mower? At a time when we're supposedly threatened with an obesity epidemic the excercise would be a whole lot healthier and cheaper than gym membership and we might even enjoy peaceful Sundays once more.
I can really appreciate that this solution would not be for everyone, least of all professional gardeners like Joe, but might it just take off?
Carly
I think it's a great ambition, Carly, but it would demand a considerable change of direction from the manufacturers, and they would need to take the public with them if they were not to be left with a warehouse full of unwanted mowers, however well-engineered.
I bought my daughter an electric mower for about £50 from B&Q to do her little squares of lawn front and back, and I doubt if a push one would be cheaper. And I can cut her privet hedge to perfection in about five minutes with the machine.
She is of a generation that prefers an electric gadget, and she prefers zumba to gardening. I was brought up push-mowing with a Qualcast, but I'm not sure there's any way back.
Ha ha Joe, you hit the nail on the head there " I can cut her privet hedge to perfection in about five minutes with the machine." Who needs electical power if you have parent power
Ok, maybe I'm the preverbial cockeyed optimist but with the growing green movement I'd like to see someone try to bring back manual mowers, maybe brought up to date in cool colours, (check out what they're doing to jazz up shopping trolleys). My experience of buying electric lawnmowers is that they may be cheap but can't be repaired when they break down so just have to be replaced.We live in such a throw away society - apologies for being a grumpy old woman!
Carly
No apology necessary Carly! (By the way, she's a teacher, so spends half the weekend on school work, and most of her kids are pre-verbal
.) Good luck with the campaign, I'm not against it, but the practicalities and the economy may be. Necessity is usually the mother of invention, so we'll see how things go - if we live long enough.
My response to heavy, clogging, noisy machines which ripped rather than cut the grass? Dug up the grass and grew vegetables instead! Much more rewarding.
I'm not sure Luke will go for that option!