</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I live in Minnesota, where the snow comes & stays all winter.
I guess this thread reminds me of all the poorly designed driveways I've seen!)</font>
I'll give you that. Our driveway looks really nice but it's not designed with plowing in mind.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif We need snow blowers here on the prairie, where the wind blows the snow all winter long. If you don't blow the snow away, it just piles up & drifts in twice as deep in a few hours - and the next time, twice as deep again....)</font>
I'm from Buffalo originally, where you need snowblowers too, but they don't always work - sometimes the snow gets too mushy to blow if it's warm enough. Where you are, I think you can count on it being cold enough for snow to blow (in fact that's why you get the drifting issue). Here, near the Gulf Stream, we get snow but we don't seem to get the cold as much. So we get a lot of mushy, sleety icy heavy stuff which this year the weather guys are starting to call "wintry mix". Sort of like Quickcrete because if it turns cold then it can set right in with black ice underneath.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I look as some of the driveway configurations folks come up with in summer - and just shake my head. /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif)</font>
I certainly didn't design my driveway. I might redesign it, though.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Using that side-dump rig, I'd not be able to lift the bucket high enough to dump the snow by March 'here'.)</font>
That's a really good point. I can't imagine that amount of accumulation here, though.
Given what you say it's kind of ironic that the people that make the side dump bucket for snow removal are in Minnesota, eh?
I have a friend who lives in Saskatchewan; when I talk about snow removal he just giggles.