Anonymous wrote:As we prepare for the snowstorm, i am reminded yet again why i love not having sidewalks
Anonymous wrote:We have a snow blower for our sidewalk. It’s FANTASTIC! Does the job so quickly and easily, we do ours and our surrounding neighbors sidewalks. It’s fun and good exercise and good to get out in the sun and fresh air! Those of you without sidewalks, stay lazy and lame!
Anonymous wrote:Am I the only woman that likes shoveling snow? It makes me feel strong, and it's such a great way to mix up workouts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am I the only woman that likes shoveling snow? It makes me feel strong, and it's such a great way to mix up workouts.
I'm the OP and I'm a lady who loves shovelingg snow too! But I like shovelling pristine driveway snow on my own time, not iced over stomped on sidewalk snow within 12 hours after the snow stops falling like my old HOA dictated
Here's what you do.
Shovel ASAP, preferably mid snowfall.
Lay down de-icer.
Done. It's so easy.
Anonymous wrote:Yep. shoveling snow, mowing your lawn, etc. It's just exercise god forbid. Why would you avoid exercise?
Anonymous wrote:I actually hate that there are no sidewalks in our neighborhood, but not having to shovel one after a snowstorm is a small consolation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop being so lazy. Having sidewalks makes a neighborhood more safe for pedestrians, and walking is one of the best (and free) exercises a person can do.
Pedestrians can walk on the road. Roads were never meant for cars only. Bike, walk, scoot, skate on the road!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop being so lazy. Having sidewalks makes a neighborhood more safe for pedestrians, and walking is one of the best (and free) exercises a person can do.
Lazy is good. Shoveled sidewalks are dangerous; they become slick with small bits of packed snow that trip up careless walkers. Shoveling creates an "attractive nuisance" that makes owner liable for slip and fall damage to pasersby.
Better to make people walk over rugged snow pile if they want to walk.
Let the snow fall and melt. This isn't Minnesota.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not that big of a deal. Geez.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I actually hate that there are no sidewalks in our neighborhood, but not having to shovel one after a snowstorm is a small consolation.
For some reason in my sister's neighborhood with sidewalks, people only stop and look when they reach the road. So we have to treat every driveway like a mini intersection where the driver isn't looking. They don't consider pedestrians because they think the sidewalk and cars are unrelated but they are.
I much prefer my unsidewalked neighborhood where people look out for pedestrians in the road
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop being so lazy. Having sidewalks makes a neighborhood more safe for pedestrians, and walking is one of the best (and free) exercises a person can do.
Lazy is good. Shoveled sidewalks are dangerous; they become slick with small bits of packed snow that trip up careless walkers. Shoveling creates an "attractive nuisance" that makes owner liable for slip and fall damage to pasersby.
Better to make people walk over rugged snow pile if they want to walk.
Let the snow fall and melt. This isn't Minnesota.