Zoe Piel wrote:It's been quite some time since we got a good rain in my area. It's also been deadly hot, and I haven't been keeping up on mowing too well this summer. Now I go to mow with my grass blade and find I can't get much purchase on the dry grass. It's mostly green foxtail (with thick, horsey stems) and bermuda grass (with dry, crispy thatch underneath).
Any tips for dealing with dry dry dry grass?
"To live at all is miracle enough" ~Mervyn Peake
Baryonyx Knife Co. --Owner
Benjamin Bouchard wrote:
Coarse scratch pattern, extra-crisp apex. Use a coarse stone to set the scratch pattern, then jump to a very fine stone. This will help eliminate any burr at the apex by cutting it off without actually erasing the "serration" of the coarse scratch pattern. Then finish with a wooden "whipping stick" to strop the blade. No polishing compound is needed -- just the bare wood. I like to make my whipping sticks from 1/2" x 2" pine or spruce, though any wood will do, and shape a grip on one end then sand the broad faces so they have a slight convex shape to them. The wood will grab any microscopic folds or unevenness in the apex at that stage and draw it straight.
You should never forget that every creature has its purpose in the cycle of nature and can also be very important to humans. Sepp Holzer's Permaculture
T Blankinship wrote:
Benjamin Bouchard wrote:
Coarse scratch pattern, extra-crisp apex. Use a coarse stone to set the scratch pattern, then jump to a very fine stone. This will help eliminate any burr at the apex by cutting it off without actually erasing the "serration" of the coarse scratch pattern. Then finish with a wooden "whipping stick" to strop the blade. No polishing compound is needed -- just the bare wood. I like to make my whipping sticks from 1/2" x 2" pine or spruce, though any wood will do, and shape a grip on one end then sand the broad faces so they have a slight convex shape to them. The wood will grab any microscopic folds or unevenness in the apex at that stage and draw it straight.
This would make the blade sharper right?
"To live at all is miracle enough" ~Mervyn Peake
Baryonyx Knife Co. --Owner
r ranson wrote:Great suggestion.
I find early morning mowing before chores or sunrise works well. But we get morning dew here.
One thing I was worried about is a spark. We have a rocky area I want to chop and drop, but it got too dry and I don't know if sparks are a possibility with a scythe. We are on the no-mower stage of summer drought because if a blade hits a rock, the grass will ignite so fast. I was hoping a scythe would have less risk.
"To live at all is miracle enough" ~Mervyn Peake
Baryonyx Knife Co. --Owner
r ranson wrote:Great suggestion.
I find early morning mowing before chores or sunrise works well. But we get morning dew here.
One thing I was worried about is a spark. We have a rocky area I want to chop and drop, but it got too dry and I don't know if sparks are a possibility with a scythe. We are on the no-mower stage of summer drought because if a blade hits a rock, the grass will ignite so fast. I was hoping a scythe would have less risk.
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