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Old 03-09-2006, 07:36 AM posted to rec.gardens
horselover horselover is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Aug 2006
Posts: 9
Default Pitchfork for grass clippings?

hob wrote:

"Ron Hardin" wrote in message
...

What tool do I need to load a pile of grass clippings (left by scything
the lawn ; you get a pile maybe a foot high and a couple feet wide
running down the left side of a 10' swath you cut across the lawn) onto
a makeshift hay wagon, for carting into the back woods, where a
pile of lawn clippings is growing (how big will it get?)?

I've been using a garden rake, gathering into a huge pile and
then picking up a large armful with rake and remaining hand. But
it takes as long to cart away the grass clippings as it does to scythe
the swath in the first place, using this procedure.

Maybe there's a pitchfork that will work with grass clippings?
(The clippings are typically longer than a lawnmower leaves, but
certainly not hay-length.)



Outside of the garden fork (wide tines), ya got cher thrash-nmachine spiking
fork (three wide-spaced tines), yer hay fork (four tines wide space), yer
silage fork ( six-8 tiunes closer spaced), yer manure fork (a lot -like 12
or so -tines closely spaced), and probably a couple others I have never had
the opportunity to experience.

Since you cut your lawn with a scythe, I would say that by the time you are
done experimenting around, you will have picked up a couple forks.

The stuff stays on the fork because it holds itself together, and the clump
just rests on the tines.

So... if it is lawn clippings or like length fiber, I would check out a
silage fork. Silage (fermented chopped corn, long-grass, etc.) is close to
lawn clippings.



--
Ron Hardin


On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk.




I use a horse-stall cleaning fork for this sort of thing and it is
terrific. You can find them in the horse-equipment section of your local
Agway or wherever. They have plastic tines that are set at just the
right angle so that you don't have to bend over to scoop up whatever it
is you want to move. They are also lightweight. I used to use a
multi-tine manure fork for stall cleaning and moving piles of straw,
grass clippings, etc, but this tool is worlds better. There are a couple
of brands; one is called "Wonder Fork".