This is about 1/2 of the backyard in view here. You can also see our backyard on our weather webcam here. For some reason the homeowner removed every…single…tree…and…shrub from his lawn. On Google maps you could see an area of pine trees in the middle of the backyard, but no longer. More for me to mow. |
I’d been wanting to do this for months, and it wasn’t till just before Labor Day that I finally did it!
I measured the distance covered mowing our big backyard. I also measured the time and the calories expended doing it. Remember, I’m a numbers girl!
It wasn’t hard — I guess anyone could do it with a pedometer, right? But of course I had to get all techie!
We have an enormous lawn, and because we won’t be living here that long, we chose not to invest in a riding mower, and just tough out using our 11-year-old 21″ wide push-mower. When we first moved here in the cooler season, this wasn’t so bad. I didn’t have to mow at all for the first 3 months, and then it wasn’t often.
Note: Many of you know that I’m the one who mows the lawn in the family. I don’t mind at all. Until we moved into this particular house, doing this chore wasn’t a big deal. In fact, if I mow on weekends, it’s a nice break from the kids! Dave has horrible grass allergies, and I’d rather take on this chore than deal with his nose-blowing after he does it.
But by Memorial Day, in order to mulch the grass I was cutting (I can’t stand bagging/dumping grass), I had to mow no more than weekly, preferably every 5 days to minimize clumps of dead grass among the mulching. It got really old really fast. I need about 2 hours to do the entire lawn, but not while the sprinklers are running, or first thing in the morning when the lawn is covered with dew. So I’d usually wait until as late in the evening as possible, and mow mow mow until I couldn’t walk in a straight line anymore because it was so hot. And I’d still be soaked in sweat.
Between the sweating, sore arms and all the walking I was doing, I figured I’d regard this as a real workout.
There’s an app for that!
I attached my Nike+ sensor to my old running shoes that I wear to mow the lawn, fired up the Nike+ app on my iPhone and I got going with the lawn. Here are the results:
The backyard. Almost double the distance and a slightly faster pace, which I can attribute to much much longer rows. |
So I now know that cutting my yard takes about 1:15 hours (with no breaks, but I take 15-20 minutes worth of breaks), is 3.48 miles, and expends 420 calories (which for me is the same as a 3.5 mile run).
Want more geeky information regarding mowing the lawn? Here’s some for you:
Earlier this year (in the middle of their summer lawn-mowing season I assume), two Australian mathematicians calculated the ideal pattern to mow your lawn with minimal mileage.
This past spring, Wired.com posted this How-to Wiki with ideas on how to make the dreaded lawn-mowing chore more tolerable. From getting rid of grass in favor of flowers, trees and shrubs…to robotic lawn mowers (i.e. Roombas for your yard!).
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