Anonymous wrote:We do. We can afford it but I got sick of paying $$ for the industrial lawn mowers to rip our yard apart. They go too fast and don’t do a good job at all.
Anonymous wrote:It's functional exercise. Doing yard work, and mowing the lawn, uses grip strength, core muscles, quads, biceps, triceps, lats, all working in concert with balance. I think most guys are just fat, weak, and have cardiovascular issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We mow our lawn, rake and bag all our leaves, buy mulch and clean our beds, plant flowers in the spring and fall. We also clean our house, mop our floors, clean bathrooms. I can’t understand how people can afford $150/week for a cleaning service and $50/week mowing service. It’s sooo $$$ in this area.
Ouch, yes! Labor is super expensive in this area, but paying $$ for manual labor frees me to concentrate on whatever I am prioritizing.
As an immigrant, I think it is ridiculous that without affordable landscapers and gardners available, there still exists a iculture of huge lawns and yards in this country.
It's because the basic premise of housing in America was to ape their betters back in England with their verdant lawns on huge estates (the same argument would apply to the debutante balls here too). America is a crabgrass frontier baking in the hot sun but Americans have long wanted to have the gentry appearance of overcast, wet and never hot & humid England. Not even middle-class UK homes try to have the huge pointless lawn but Americans absolutely needs to have that patch of manicured non-biophilic green. Today it is rather comical that Americans spend so much time fighting weeds on non-gardened lawns. Nobody in the UK spends time seeding with non-native grass like Americans do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yard work is unbearable in the DMV summer with the humidity and mosquitos. There is nothing worse than pulling weeds, sweating like a pig while being devoured by Asian tiger mosquitos.
And yet you allow someone else to bear it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We mow our lawn, rake and bag all our leaves, buy mulch and clean our beds, plant flowers in the spring and fall. We also clean our house, mop our floors, clean bathrooms. I can’t understand how people can afford $150/week for a cleaning service and $50/week mowing service. It’s sooo $$$ in this area.
Ouch, yes! Labor is super expensive in this area, but paying $$ for manual labor frees me to concentrate on whatever I am prioritizing.
As an immigrant, I think it is ridiculous that without affordable landscapers and gardners available, there still exists a iculture of huge lawns and yards in this country.
It's because the basic premise of housing in America was to ape their betters back in England with their verdant lawns on huge estates (the same argument would apply to the debutante balls here too). America is a crabgrass frontier baking in the hot sun but Americans have long wanted to have the gentry appearance of overcast, wet and never hot & humid England. Not even middle-class UK homes try to have the huge pointless lawn but Americans absolutely needs to have that patch of manicured non-biophilic green. Today it is rather comical that Americans spend so much time fighting weeds on non-gardened lawns. Nobody in the UK spends time seeding with non-native grass like Americans do.
Anonymous wrote:I live near downtown Bethesda, where the average home sells in the 2M range.
People are great fans of the natural lawn. Sometimes grasses get a little high, borders get messy, but nothing major, at least to my eye. My front yard is one of those, and I like it that way.
It's all part of the effort to be environmentally conscious and appreciate the beauty of nature. There's nothing more terrible than a boring single varietal lawn in a sprayed-to-death yard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We mow our lawn, rake and bag all our leaves, buy mulch and clean our beds, plant flowers in the spring and fall. We also clean our house, mop our floors, clean bathrooms. I can’t understand how people can afford $150/week for a cleaning service and $50/week mowing service. It’s sooo $$$ in this area.
Ouch, yes! Labor is super expensive in this area, but paying $$ for manual labor frees me to concentrate on whatever I am prioritizing.
As an immigrant, I think it is ridiculous that without affordable landscapers and gardners available, there still exists a iculture of huge lawns and yards in this country.
Anonymous wrote:All of you suburbanites are losers. My 2750 sq foot rowhouse requires very little of this wasteful and petty "lawn care." Our back garden is made up of native plants, no grass, and a beautiful paver patio. It has loads of contrast and texture for the human eye. Many of you types, who I work with, shun me for having an "attached house." Well now it is my turn to shun you.