Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I shoveled for the first time this morning. It was a breeze. Break up the crust with feet or shovel, lift away with fluffy snow underneath. Reminded me of cutting a cake with thick fondant. The sun is already melting where I shoveled so no need for sand, salt, or anything
My husband JUST said this would have been the way to go.
This is what we did. Needed a heavier shovel to cut through the ice layer but it lifted away easily and the snow underneath was still light and fluffy. The sun is drying it out now.
My husband used his gardening shovel this morning. It's heavy with a cutting edge.
Why that fool do that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I shoveled for the first time this morning. It was a breeze. Break up the crust with feet or shovel, lift away with fluffy snow underneath. Reminded me of cutting a cake with thick fondant. The sun is already melting where I shoveled so no need for sand, salt, or anything
My husband JUST said this would have been the way to go.
This is what we did. Needed a heavier shovel to cut through the ice layer but it lifted away easily and the snow underneath was still light and fluffy. The sun is drying it out now.
My husband used his gardening shovel this morning. It's heavy with a cutting edge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I shoveled for the first time this morning. It was a breeze. Break up the crust with feet or shovel, lift away with fluffy snow underneath. Reminded me of cutting a cake with thick fondant. The sun is already melting where I shoveled so no need for sand, salt, or anything
My husband JUST said this would have been the way to go.
This is what we did. Needed a heavier shovel to cut through the ice layer but it lifted away easily and the snow underneath was still light and fluffy. The sun is drying it out now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I shoveled for the first time this morning. It was a breeze. Break up the crust with feet or shovel, lift away with fluffy snow underneath. Reminded me of cutting a cake with thick fondant. The sun is already melting where I shoveled so no need for sand, salt, or anything
My husband JUST said this would have been the way to go.
Anonymous wrote:I shoveled for the first time this morning. It was a breeze. Break up the crust with feet or shovel, lift away with fluffy snow underneath. Reminded me of cutting a cake with thick fondant. The sun is already melting where I shoveled so no need for sand, salt, or anything
Anonymous wrote:Just got back in after chopping/shoveling my walkway/steps, which were totally covered by thick/hard snow. This was my third time shoveling. I did this totally wrong and am annoyed:
Bought two 25-lb bags of snow melt on Thursday. Salted steps, sidewalk, back deck Friday night. Snow starts overnight Sat. Sunday morning shoveled/cleared all areas. Salted again. Went out and did a mini-shovel Sun afternoon. Woke up this morning and it’s like I never touched anything, which is just accumulation, I get. But the snowpack this morning was so hard I had to chop through it with my shovel to break it up to shovel. I’m also now out of salt.
Did I prep too early? I’m a new homeowner fwiw so help me do this better next year! Thank you!
- Now inside and grumbling into my coffee
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was no win-win for this one, OP.
Here's the gist:
1. Use the appropriate salt chemical for appropriate temperatures. It's too cold for pet-friendly crystals You have to use sodium chloride, effective until 15F (and we're mostly at that temp), or the more toxic calcium chloride (effective until well below 0F). You can use coarse sand for traction.
2. If more than a couple of inches are in the forecast, you never salt beforehand, since salt cannot melt tons of snow. You salt right after shoveling, and by shoveling, I mean when you hit pavement, so they don't become icy when snow melt refreezes.
3. When conditions are difficult like yesterday, it's better to shovel a little portion at a time and salt that, before going on to the next portion.
4. But here precipitation lasted 20hrs or so, with fast accumulation at times. If you went out at the wrong time, it was impossible to get to bare pavement and salt.
5. So you need to adapt to the event you have, carefully listen to last minute forecasts by actual met offices (not random influencers on social media) and have a stock of everything early in winter just in case.
6. For this storm, many chose not to shovel at all. If you know you need to get out right after the storm, you park your car at the very edge of your driveway, shovel what you can, salt if you get to bare pavement, or put down sand, and don't forget to clean the roof of your car. If you have sidewalks, you must legally clear them, but lots of people don't.
#6 would never work because the plow would either demolish your car or plow a wall of snow and ice right up to it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There was no win-win for this one, OP.
Here's the gist:
1. Use the appropriate salt chemical for appropriate temperatures. It's too cold for pet-friendly crystals You have to use sodium chloride, effective until 15F (and we're mostly at that temp), or the more toxic calcium chloride (effective until well below 0F). You can use coarse sand for traction.
2. If more than a couple of inches are in the forecast, you never salt beforehand, since salt cannot melt tons of snow. You salt right after shoveling, and by shoveling, I mean when you hit pavement, so they don't become icy when snow melt refreezes.
3. When conditions are difficult like yesterday, it's better to shovel a little portion at a time and salt that, before going on to the next portion.
4. But here precipitation lasted 20hrs or so, with fast accumulation at times. If you went out at the wrong time, it was impossible to get to bare pavement and salt.
5. So you need to adapt to the event you have, carefully listen to last minute forecasts by actual met offices (not random influencers on social media) and have a stock of everything early in winter just in case.
6. For this storm, many chose not to shovel at all. If you know you need to get out right after the storm, you park your car at the very edge of your driveway, shovel what you can, salt if you get to bare pavement, or put down sand, and don't forget to clean the roof of your car. If you have sidewalks, you must legally clear them, but lots of people don't.
#6 would never work because the plow would either demolish your car or plow a wall of snow and ice right up to it