Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Boil water and pour it over the sidewalk. Done and done.
Interesting. I should try this.
Anonymous wrote:I've literally never heard of someone getting in trouble for not shoveling their sidewalk. That's probably about as common as tickets for not using a turn signal.
Anonymous wrote: Boil water and pour it over the sidewalk. Done and done.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in a place with basically daily snow, and it was understood that you get up early and shovel as soon as anyone might need a sidewalk. People like nurses or blue collar workers would be out there at 4-5 am to make their shifts. Getting down to bare pavement or concrete was the goal and a point of pride. Leaving it until lunch is embarrassing.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in a place with basically daily snow, and it was understood that you get up early and shovel as soon as anyone might need a sidewalk. People like nurses or blue collar workers would be out there at 4-5 am to make their shifts. Getting down to bare pavement or concrete was the goal and a point of pride. Leaving it until lunch is embarrassing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you shovel, you leave pieces of snow/ice on the sidewalk and that will become icy.
When you don't shovel, you walk over it, it's easier to deal with.
When you do shovel, you should put the ice melting ingredients on there to keep other ice from forming. That's the most effective way.
And you don't put alot, just a little will do.
Bizarre. There's no need for chemicals (yes, salt is a chemical that is not good for the environment). Just sun is enough, whenever it comes out. The waterways, soil, plants and animals are more important than flawless concrete.
The point is not "flawless concrete" it's your neighbors not breaking a hip. Use pet safe ice melt or even sand if it bothers you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you shovel, you leave pieces of snow/ice on the sidewalk and that will become icy.
When you don't shovel, you walk over it, it's easier to deal with.
When you do shovel, you should put the ice melting ingredients on there to keep other ice from forming. That's the most effective way.
And you don't put alot, just a little will do.
Bizarre. There's no need for chemicals (yes, salt is a chemical that is not good for the environment). Just sun is enough, whenever it comes out. The waterways, soil, plants and animals are more important than flawless concrete.
Anonymous wrote:When you shovel, you leave pieces of snow/ice on the sidewalk and that will become icy.
When you don't shovel, you walk over it, it's easier to deal with.
When you do shovel, you should put the ice melting ingredients on there to keep other ice from forming. That's the most effective way.
And you don't put alot, just a little will do.
Anonymous wrote:Don't lay down ice melt. It's bad for waterways and for plants.
https://www.cbf.org/blogs/save-the-bay/2020/12/salt-for-snow-and-ice.html
Anonymous wrote:I agree with OP. Shovel your darn walks.