I'm more than happy to help my neighbors. It's the sense of entitlement that seems to emerge from a very few that's sometimes a bit annoying.
I take care of my own 1/4-mile gravel driveway. And then I take care of the neighboring 1/4-mile gravel lane which has four families living off it. Usually my ATV w/plow is enough. With the 30+ inches we got from Jonas, I had to use the front-end loader on the tractor. As everyone here knows, moving snow with a FEL is tedious work. It took me the better part of three days.
Most my neighbors are effusive in their thanks. We talk and laugh throughout the year and they're quick with a choice cold beverage or a hot dish or having the wife and I down for a cookout. Even that's not necessary, but it's nice to know they appreciate what you do for them.
The one family that irks me a little is the one with a 300' feeder driveway to get to that lane (the other three families live just off the lane). I end up doing his "special" driveway too. He waved at me while I was slowly working up to his house. But he hardly mentioned it otherwise. And, unlike all the other neighbors who were out with shovels digging out what they could, he did almost nothing. Waiting, apparently, for me to do it all.
I joked later with my wife that maybe he thinks I'm the contractor for the HOA (the joke being that there is no HOA).
There is also an additional stress that comes with plowing out a neighbor's property. Even with good equipment, it's not a given what will happen in dealing with a major snowstorm. If I get my tractor stuck on my driveway, it's an aggravation. It could remain stuck there for days and it is still just that... an aggravation. If it happens on my neighbors' lane, though, I now have an urgent sense of obligation to get it unstuck and not "block" them from getting out (assuming they could or might have someone else come and dig them out). And since I'm the only one around with a tractor - there is no bigger tractor to go get - that consideration is constantly with me while over there.
All that said, I would never not try and help. For the first 30 years we lived here, long before we had any proper equipment, my wife and I used shovels to dig out. All during that time there was a different neighbor altogether who lived down at the end of my driveway. Despite being only 80' from the road, he had a full size tractor which he used. Not once in all those years did he try and help us or anyone else out.
I never want to be that neighbor.
I take care of my own 1/4-mile gravel driveway. And then I take care of the neighboring 1/4-mile gravel lane which has four families living off it. Usually my ATV w/plow is enough. With the 30+ inches we got from Jonas, I had to use the front-end loader on the tractor. As everyone here knows, moving snow with a FEL is tedious work. It took me the better part of three days.
Most my neighbors are effusive in their thanks. We talk and laugh throughout the year and they're quick with a choice cold beverage or a hot dish or having the wife and I down for a cookout. Even that's not necessary, but it's nice to know they appreciate what you do for them.
The one family that irks me a little is the one with a 300' feeder driveway to get to that lane (the other three families live just off the lane). I end up doing his "special" driveway too. He waved at me while I was slowly working up to his house. But he hardly mentioned it otherwise. And, unlike all the other neighbors who were out with shovels digging out what they could, he did almost nothing. Waiting, apparently, for me to do it all.
I joked later with my wife that maybe he thinks I'm the contractor for the HOA (the joke being that there is no HOA).
There is also an additional stress that comes with plowing out a neighbor's property. Even with good equipment, it's not a given what will happen in dealing with a major snowstorm. If I get my tractor stuck on my driveway, it's an aggravation. It could remain stuck there for days and it is still just that... an aggravation. If it happens on my neighbors' lane, though, I now have an urgent sense of obligation to get it unstuck and not "block" them from getting out (assuming they could or might have someone else come and dig them out). And since I'm the only one around with a tractor - there is no bigger tractor to go get - that consideration is constantly with me while over there.
All that said, I would never not try and help. For the first 30 years we lived here, long before we had any proper equipment, my wife and I used shovels to dig out. All during that time there was a different neighbor altogether who lived down at the end of my driveway. Despite being only 80' from the road, he had a full size tractor which he used. Not once in all those years did he try and help us or anyone else out.
I never want to be that neighbor.