It’s too hot to mow.

   / It’s too hot to mow. #81  
Bush-hogging my fields, under the hottest of summer suns is one of my favorite jobs, way up here near the Canadian border. This is the time of year when I do most of that.

Open-field running, in 6th gear at pto-rpm, puts a nice steady breeze across my face. I have a big home-made, canvas over wood frame canopy, that keeps me in the shade. I drop my bucket to get rid of the front end bounce and improve clearance and forward visibility.

You couldn’t pay me to do that in a cab tractor with AC. I work 45-50 hours a week, in a climate controlled factory, and I cherish my outdoors time.

Here is my Bush-hogging setup:
View attachment 809787

Notice the little patch of early sweetcorn in our front yard behind the tractor. I put it there for multiple reasons (after getting permission from my wife).

1) I don’t care for lawn mowing and that corn cut our acre of lawn down to 3/4, saving me at least 15 minutes each time I mow.

2) That section of lawn was very rough, always forcing me to go real slow with my hydrostatic riding mower. It needed to be plowed, disked and re-graded and seeded anyhow.

I plowed it in April and I’ll finish the job in late August after the corn is harvested. They call that “double cropping”. That is the best time of year to plant a new lawn.

3) We had a 4-week long June drought this year. There is no better looking sweet corn (or field corn) in our town right now. I was able to nurse that little 1/4 acre thru it with a lawn sprinkler and short garden hose. The surrounding big fields got pretty parched.

1/2 hour of city water, every other late afternoon thru that stretch, did wonders. That corn is chest-high now and starting to tassel.

4) Coons usually get most of my early sweetcorn, when I plant it out back. It will be easier for me to trap them up front and what I can’t can’t catch might be taken out by vehicular road traffic.

5) My wife and kids always complain about having to go way out back to harvest the corn. Now they can pick it on their way to the mailbox.

And to think, my neighbors thought I was crazy when they seen me out there plowing up our front yard.
View attachment 809792
That is nice looking dark soil that you have plowed.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #82  
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   / It’s too hot to mow. #84  
Cold weather is much more uncomfortable
We will have to disagree on that. We rarely get much below 0F here, so I can't speak for our friends in Fairbanks AK, but I never mind the cold except on very windy days. You can always put more on, but there's only so much you can take off, before the neighbors complain.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #85  
The second time I mowed this year it was 90*, I don't know what the humidity was. I put the ZTR away and sat down in the shop. Finally

the energy to go to the house with the portable AC going and sat in my recliner. I sat there for 2 1/2 hours, I didn't even eat dinner.

Finally after that I had enough energy to take a shower. Even though mowing isn't hard work, I can't take the heat anymore at 76 years

old. When I was younger I never had problems with the heat.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #86  
The second time I mowed this year it was 90*, I don't know what the humidity was. I put the ZTR away and sat down in the shop. Finally

the energy to go to the house with the portable AC going and sat in my recliner. I sat there for 2 1/2 hours, I didn't even eat dinner.

Finally after that I had enough energy to take a shower. Even though mowing isn't hard work, I can't take the heat anymore at 76 years

old. When I was younger I never had problems with the heat.
I am with you. During the summertime in High School, I worked full-time on a farm doing manual labor.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #87  
I am with you. During the summertime in High School, I worked full-time on a farm doing manual labor.
I wonder how much of that is we have gotten old and soft - and how much of that is due to it being hotter than it used to be?
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #88  
Agree heat is harder to take as I have gotten older. Don’t mow or make hay as much. Try to pick cooler times to mow in open station tractor.

Experimenting using substitute ice packs in pockets to help keep cool. Medicine is shipped with these ice packs plastic bags. Fishing vest holds several and short pockets. Works for a couple hours and need to take a break anyway. High humidity clothing is soaked. The dog and I seek comfort in the spring water plunge pool stock tank in the summer months.

At work used ice vests for hazmat dress out PPE.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #89  
There have been a few allusions to AC making us soft, in the last several pages. What I've noticed is that we've lost some of our regional "pacing". Being a Yankee, I remember even as a kid how slow southerners would move, whenever we would drive through the southern states in the 1970's and 80's. Heck, they couldn't even talk fast in July, let alone fill up your car and check the oil at the service station.

I think this was an adapted behavior, many generations of living in this heat, without air conditioning. Nationally-syndicated television began homogenizing our speech long before air conditioning, I guess. But now that everyone lives, drives, sleeps and eats in air conditioned spaces, I see even more of these regional adaptations being lost. There's no longer such need to develop these slower inclinations, pacing yourself to beat the heat.

The other thing I remember when traveling through the south is when an old woman would say, "oh bless your soul," it wasn't a compliment. It was southern polite-speak for, "oh, you poor idiot." :p
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #90  
Age is the larger factor. At 74 I mind the heat more than I did years ago.

The last couple Summers I was in high school were spent working in an old iron casting foundry. After that it was a career in construction. No A/C for us. Projects started by either ruining good piece of farmland or a hole in the ground in the city where an old building had been demolished. As the building progressed in Summer it was a hot box because the HVAC came late in the game. Back then it was "have another salt pill and keep working".

While "Global Warming" seems all the rage, it was just as hot or hotter years ago in Lancaster County. Hot spells were worse. The below links were referenced for our locale. The highest temp recorded here was 107° on 08/07/1918. Most days in a year over 100° was 1930. Most consecutive days over 90° was June 21 - July 5 in 1966. 1930 had the most days (133) over 80°.

As my old boss said - there are about two weeks in the Summer it's too hot for man or beast, and about two weeks in the Winter that are just too cold to be outside working.


 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #91  
My Grandmother (88 but who's counting) is a farm girl (Grew up poor). Hated when grandpa would turn the A/C on. Since he passed two years ago, she'd rather leave all the windows in the house open and run a fan. She made it until the 4th of July this year before she broke down and turned it on. Partly because she thinks it's too expensive and also because she enjoys the breeze and the sounds from her little lot.

Myself, put me in the "Rather be cold" camp. When I was a landscaper, there were days when I'd come home from work and empty the sweat out of my boots and wring my shirt out. But there were many more days where it was mid 70s and a lot more fun than sitting in the office I'm in now.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #92  
I can take the heat just not the sun. I can work all day in a 100 degree shop but the sun beats me down. I would rather be hot than cold. I get cold sometimes I cant warm up. Pretty sure thats where "chilled to the bone" comes from. Spent a lot of time last winter doing work that required laying on the concrete. Sucked the heat out of me and would take a hot shower and hours to warm back up. Think this winter I will be prepared with those interlocking rubber mats. Creeper is nice but its only practical half of the time.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #93  
There have been a few allusions to AC making us soft, in the last several pages. What I've noticed is that we've lost some of our regional "pacing". Being a Yankee, I remember even as a kid how slow southerners would move, whenever we would drive through the southern states in the 1970's and 80's. Heck, they couldn't even talk fast in July, let alone fill up your car and check the oil at the service station.

I think this was an adapted behavior, many generations of living in this heat, without air conditioning. Nationally-syndicated television began homogenizing our speech long before air conditioning, I guess. But now that everyone lives, drives, sleeps and eats in air conditioned spaces, I see even more of these regional adaptations being lost. There's no longer such need to develop these slower inclinations, pacing yourself to beat the heat.

The other thing I remember when traveling through the south is when an old woman would say, "oh bless your soul," it wasn't a compliment. It was southern polite-speak for, "oh, you poor idiot." :p
I am one of the slow Southerners and I do not take issue with your post. Our economy revolved around agriculture and one cannot rush plants or livestock into growing. We learned to "walk the fence line" when going down to the fishing hole. I remember my mother picking beans in the morning and then shelling them during the heat of the day. We "conserved our energy" so we could work. When the weather turned cooler we also knew we would be up working as long as there was light to see by.

As a side note, I remember growing up in a house that had central air; my father would not use the AC because he was used to the heat. At night every window in the house would be opened and I would lay on top of the sheet and sweat. On Sunday's dad would wear a suit coat to church. The stained glass windows would only slightly open, there was no AC and we would wave hand fans given by the local funeral home.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #94  
While "Global Warming" seems all the rage, it was just as hot or hotter years ago in Lancaster County. Hot spells were worse. The below links were referenced for our locale. The highest temp recorded here was 107° on 08/07/1918. Most days in a year over 100° was 1930. Most consecutive days over 90° was June 21 - July 5 in 1966. 1930 had the most days (133) over 80°.
Definitely. But bumps and wiggles in the local temperature is no more "climate", than a tire is a "car". Big complex system, of which any local weather over any short period is but one small component. And because it's a relatively complex system, there have been so many wrong conclusions and predictions drawn from it, but the science is always improving.

Things are warming up, and it's driving wider swings in our weather and storm systems, the data is clear on that. As to nailing down all of the contributors to that, and what fractional part each of them play in that warming, there's obviously a lot of debate on that.

Also, as the global average warms, believe it or not, there are areas that are going to get colder weather. Most notably, Great Britain who currently enjoys uncommonly warm weather for their latitude, is going to suffer some mighty cold weather if the Gulf Stream ever stalls. It is predicted that will happen, if the warming trend continues, but it's likely that prediction has some margin of error, and there's no saying that recent history will continue unchanged in pushing us that direction at any constant pace.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #95  
Mowing with a zero turn provides enough breeze to make it manageable.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #96  
Definitely. But bumps and wiggles in the local temperature is no more "climate", than a tire is a "car". Big complex system, of which any local weather over any short period is but one small component. And because it's a relatively complex system, there have been so many wrong conclusions and predictions drawn from it, but the science is always improving.

Things are warming up, and it's driving wider swings in our weather and storm systems, the data is clear on that. As to nailing down all of the contributors to that, and what fractional part each of them play in that warming, there's obviously a lot of debate on that.

Also, as the global average warms, believe it or not, there are areas that are going to get colder weather. Most notably, Great Britain who currently enjoys uncommonly warm weather for their latitude, is going to suffer some mighty cold weather if the Gulf Stream ever stalls. It is predicted that will happen, if the warming trend continues, but it's likely that prediction has some margin of error, and there's no saying that recent history will continue unchanged in pushing us that direction at any constant pace.
Climate change is a religion and the "data" can't go back far enough to provide an actual picture.
Remember when it used to be global warming? That didn't stick because of brutal winters so the name had to be changed.
Every climate change nut that has predicted gloom and doom since the 70's has been wrong. And will continue to be wrong.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #97  
YOU may have 30 minutes of grass cutting, but some of us have acres to cut. Ain't no 30 minutes thing. (plus some medications limit your ability to sweat. No sweat = heat stroke.)
I mow for about 3 hrs on my zero turn. I usually start at 0800-0900 hrs. Never have an issue.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #98  
Climate change is a religion and the "data" can't go back far enough to provide an actual picture.
Remember when it used to be global warming? That didn't stick because of brutal winters so the name had to be changed.
Every climate change nut that has predicted gloom and doom since the 70's has been wrong. And will continue to be wrong.
I remember my 6th grade teacher freaking us out about acid rain. Everything was going to corrode, bridges ,infrastructure, crops were going to die and famine was imminent, Ice ages, ozone holes its always something.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #99  
Pa wouldn't get ac in the house. Partially because he was... cheap.
also he was of the opinion that if you got used to it you wouldn't want to work outside. Sitting here in front of the screen I think I agree with him.
 
   / It’s too hot to mow. #100  
Ma would have made sure Pa had the A/C on.
 

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