Anonymous wrote:I made the same mistake with salting -- I salted our (very long) driveway after the first time we cleared it on Sunday morning around 7:30 am. Then I was out of ice. We blew the driveway twice more though, and got it to basically pavement, and we are ok. I won't make the same mistake with salt again though.
Unfortunately, the older couple in their 80s up the road are stuck behind a driveway that is a big block of ice, too much for the road clearer with the bobcat that they paid, and we are heading up there in an hour or so to try to break it up with metal shovels.
Anonymous wrote:Salt doesn't work when its really cold. But you were right to shovel multiple times. It would be even worse if you were trying to do it all at once. This amount of sleet/ice is just really hard to deal with. Its going to be a rough week with no melting.
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:I grew up here too and remember a number of storms where we could walk on the layer of ice that formed on top of the snow. Made fantastic tunnels by clearing out the snow and leaving an icy roof.
I waited till today to clear because I knew there would be fluffy light snow beneath the ice. Shoveling yesterday was not the move.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up here too and remember a number of storms where we could walk on the layer of ice that formed on top of the snow. Made fantastic tunnels by clearing out the snow and leaving an icy roof.
I waited till today to clear because I knew there would be fluffy light snow beneath the ice. Shoveling yesterday was not the move.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve never seen a storm like this in 60 years here. Sleet for 12 hours straight is not at all typical.
Are you a climate change denier?
Anonymous wrote:I’ve never seen a storm like this in 60 years here. Sleet for 12 hours straight is not at all typical.