Small yard cheapest is $20-30/cut. Half acre to acre will run $45-75/cut, includes wacking your weeds.I'm getting old. How much are people paying to get their lawns mowed and weeds wacked? Having it done once every week or two?
Small yard cheapest is $20-30/cut. Half acre to acre will run $45-75/cut, includes wacking your weeds.I'm getting old. How much are people paying to get their lawns mowed and weeds wacked? Having it done once every week or two?
Just bought my first house in New Providence (after living in an apartment in JC for 9 years since college) so this will probably be the first of many OT theards:
Lawnmower recommendations?
Lot is only .34 acre so looking at self-propelled mower.
Don't see the need/cost for a riding.
Why with an engine at all.Get a reel type push mower. That way you can give up your gym membership and save the money.Why self propelled? Unless it's hilly or uneven terrain a push should be fine for that size of lawn. Nice exercise for you.
Get a 3-1 with a mulching blade, big rear wheels and the widest deck 22" (as @Knight Shift said) you can find. Don't bag.
Something that looks like one of these...
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----I'm getting old. How much are people paying to get their lawns mowed and weeds wacked? Having it done once every week or two?
I live in a neighborhood where the lots are about the same size as yours. When I moved in 20-some years ago, everyone mowed their lawns with push or self-propelled mowers.
I bought a Honda self-propelled mower. Absolutely hated it. I felt the self-propelled feature was pulling me around the yard. It was awkward to turn, and awkward to slow down or speed up. It took me two hours to mow the entire lawn. And if I couldn't get out there twice a week in the spring, when the grass grows quickly, the grass would be too high for it to handle. That was just too much of a time commitment for me at the time.
One spring, about 2 years after I moved into the house, I was away on a business trip, came home and struggled cutting the high grass. I asked the landscaper mowing the lawn next door how much he would charge me to finish the job, and hired him on the spot.
I used the landscaper for about 5 years until he got out of the business. By that point just about everyone in my neighborhood had stopped using walk-behind mowers. Almost everyone either had a landscaper or riding mower. I borrowed my neighbor's John Deere riding mower, and decided I liked it, so I bought one. I've been using it ever since.
Go out and buy whatever walk-behind mower you want. It doesn't make too much difference. As a 30 year old with a one-third acre lot in New Providence, within 5 years you will either have a landscaper or a riding mower.
Flat lawn? who needs a stinking engine or or gas , go old school :
I get the appeal of a landscaper, but a riding mower for a 1/3 acre?
Have about 20 years of experience mowing lawns myself and have nothing but good things to say about the self-propelled Honda and Craftsman I've used, both on hills and flats. Think the OP is on the money.
Shift: Depends on use. The more you use it, the more deposits start building up in the oil [edit: GAS, not oil). If you don't change it, the build-up can muck up the carburetor.
You don't want that to happen. It's a PITA to clean, even if you're handy (you basically have to take the whole darn thing apart and then rebuild it).
Much easier to simply change oil/spark plug every season than to go through that ordeal even once.
PS: At the end of the season, make sure to mix in fuel stabilizer with the last tank of gas you buy. And run your equipment until they run out of gas before storing it for the winter. Please trust me on this one.
Small yard cheapest is $20-30/cut. Half acre to acre will run $45-75/cut, includes wacking your weeds.
Rumson. But I have rental properties in Wall and Belmar. Maybe I should get new quotes.Where do you live?
Western Monmouth. .89 acre (but I have a pool). Corner lot (so about 280 linear feet of sidewalk to edge). I pay $37.50 a week. Cuts are from 3rd week of march until week before Thanksgiving.
Rumson. But I have rental properties in Wall and Belmar. Maybe I should get new quotes.
Rumson- I cut my own. We are not all on 5-10 acre estates here. I am the scourge of my neighborhood. Actually, my 15 year old son cuts the lawn. He does not mind, and appreciates the 35 or 40 bucks we give him. Gave him a less on the chain saw when we had a huge tree limb fall in our yard, and he was a bit freaked out. I was using chainsaws at 12 or 13 years old. Kids today are missing so much fun.Rumson? You're rich you can afford 70 a week...haha
My guy is to the lower end, is certainly not out there with a pair of scissors, but he does the basics well.
US Grounds is popular in my hood and the quoted me $52 for the same job. But they are meticulous. Trades off and all that jazz...
Rumson- I cut my own. We are not all on 5-10 acre estates here. I am the scourge of my neighborhood. Actually, my 15 year old son cuts the lawn. He does not mind, and appreciates the 35 or 40 bucks we give him. Gave him a less on the chain saw when we had a huge tree limb fall in our yard, and he was a bit freaked out. I was using chainsaws at 12 or 13 years old. Kids today are missing so much fun.
I cut mine the first year we were here. With a Craftsman pusher with a Honda engine. I'm not gonna lie, it was a PITA.
My kids are at an age where they are too young to do it and old enough that their sports and activities require my attention. So I pay. I can envision a time when I have them do it for a few years...just because.
What's the point of having teenage kids if you aren't going to have them do chores around the house. When your kids are old enough to do yardwork, cancel your landscaper and have the kids do the work. It is your responsibility as a parent.
I think you will find yourself in the minority with that mindset.What's the point of having teenage kids if you aren't going to have them do chores around the house. When your kids are old enough to do yardwork, cancel your landscaper and have the kids do the work. It is your responsibility as a parent.
"Lot is only .34"
I push a craftsman on 1 acre. 22 inch. Split it up over two days. Was a great price and it takes a beating. I even use it to suck up leaves in the fall, chew them up, and bag it. Got it 3yrs ago. I haven't purchased a rider yet. I need the exercise.
For only .34 acre, IMO, you don't need some blast off mower.
I hear people on the Honda. That is best machine out there. If I had the money, I would have bought a Honda snow blower. Had to go with a Craftsman. It does the job. Electric start never works under 25 degrees. You get what you pay for.
Around 1990, I bought some POS lawn mower at a Home Depot (I think). I was rushed and hadn't done my usual pre-purchase research, so I just grabbed the cheapest lawnmower I could find that was reasonably wide.My 40 year old next door neighbor makes me laugh when it comes to mowing lawns..... He bought one at Sears, I guess with their name on it, about 8 years ago..... He leaves it outside, uncovered all year round, then fills it with gas from last year, maybe older, that of course had no stabilizer.....
And the damn thing starts on the first gentle pull for him, every time.....
-----Get it done by someone. It is worth it.
----Around 1990, I bought some POS lawn mower at a Home Depot (I think). I was rushed and hadn't done my usual pre-purchase research, so I just grabbed the cheapest lawnmower I could find that was reasonably wide.
I never once changed the oil in it. Would regularly leave gas in it over the winter, never did the slightest maintenance on it. It was just a stop gap measure until I researched a "good" mower.
It did have a Briggs and Stratton engine, but the brand name was something I don't even think is around anymore - I'd never heard of it before I bought it; in any event, I can't remember the name. Wasn't one of the big brands.
Anyway, that POS mower lasted until about 5 years ago. Never failed to start once. Every spring, started right up. I finally got rid of it because my kid ran something over in the yard (a rock or something) and it started to sound "wobbly"; didn't want the blade to fly off while he was using it. Still started right up though.
ummm...that's what I said
And nobody has ever questioned my parenting skills when it comes to making my kids work hard. I might not be perfect, but that one is pretty well covered.
My sons are 8 and 5. We're not exactly in 1847 and I'm gonna send them out to the back 40 with a sythe.