How do you deal with your tree's fallen leaves?

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  • Ed62
    The Full Monte
    • Oct 2006
    • 6021
    • NW Indiana
    • BT3K

    #16
    We have 1/2 acre, with 5 mature oaks, 1 mature pine, 2 young magnolias, and several other young trees. We also have 8 mature oaks that overhang our fence from the neighbor's yard.

    My wife has a flower garden, and I can't get the lawn tractor in that area. That area requires that I blow/rake the leaves out to the front yard, where they're put on a tarp, and dragged to the curb for leaf pickup by the county.

    The back yard and the front yard are mostly taken care of with a twin bagger for my Cub Cadet lawn tractor. Those leaves are put in the compost pile, and they're chewed up fine enough that they'll be just about ready for use in the spring.
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    Ed
    Do you know about kickback? Ray has a good writeup here... https://www.sawdustzone.org/articles...mare-explained

    For a kickback demonstration video http://www.metacafe.com/watch/910584...demonstration/

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    • JSUPreston
      Veteran Member
      • Dec 2005
      • 1189
      • Montgomery, AL.
      • Delta 36-979 w/Biesemyere fence kit making it a 36-982. Previous saw was BT3100-1.

      #17
      I wait until the wind blows them into the neighbor's yard.
      "It's a dog eat dog world out there, and I'm wearing Milk-Bone underwear."- Norm (from Cheers)

      Eat beef-because the west wasn't won on salad.

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      • pelligrini
        Veteran Member
        • Apr 2007
        • 4217
        • Fort Worth, TX
        • Craftsman 21829

        #18
        There's not too many trees on my small lot, two in front and two in back, plus the neighbors two oaks. I mulch them up with the mower. I'm usually mowing well into november anyways.
        Erik

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        • charliex
          Senior Member
          • Mar 2004
          • 632
          • Spring Valley, MN, USA.
          • Sears equivelent BT3100-1

          #19
          I have 2 large Maples that drop twice as many leaves in the fall as they sprout in the spring. I mulch and mulch and ... well you get the picture. Then I pick up the densest areas with the bagger. Usually only get two 40 gal bags full and most of that is cleaned off the sidewalk and driveway. This method definitely cuts down on the need for lawn fertilizer as dbhost indicates.
          Chas

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          • MilDoc

            #20
            Mower mulches them very fine. Great fertilizer.

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            • herb fellows
              Veteran Member
              • Apr 2007
              • 1867
              • New York City
              • bt3100

              #21
              I have a very small property, but I use a Toro electric mulcher, blower, vacuum combo. I think it ran about $80. It vacuums up the leaves and puts them into an attached bag, then I just dump the bag into a garbage bag and start the process all over again. They claim it turns 16 bags of leaves into 1, I'd say more like 5-6 from my experience.
              You don't need a parachute to skydive, you only need a parachute to skydive twice.

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              • SARGE..g-47

                #22
                I've got just over and acre and the house is surrounded with leaf bearers. I used to have to rake them 3 times each season here in Georgia.. mid Nov.. late Nov. and late Dec. to get the last of the last. They would take about 6 hours to rake and bag. Back breaker! So... I purchased a Stihl leaf blower.

                I still have to do them 3 times but... it takes an hour to blow them into piles.. anothe hour to rake them onto a 20' x 20' tarp and drag to the front curb which is in a cul de sac. The city has a truck that comes by every Tuesday at my house that has a giant vacuum that sucks the leaves off the curb. So.. not so bad as the leaf blower.. tarp has changed the terms of engagement into very manageable.

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                • gerti
                  Veteran Member
                  • Dec 2003
                  • 2233
                  • Minnetonka, MN, USA.
                  • BT3100 "Frankensaw"

                  #23
                  I mulch year-round with my riding mower. I figure whatever I take out of the yard I have to make up in some way, so I prefer to leave the clippings. In fall I also use it to mulch the leaves under. Once the snow is gone 6 months later so are the leftovers from the leaves... That job has become a lot less unpleasant since I wear a Trend Airshield.

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                  • docrowan
                    Senior Member
                    • Mar 2007
                    • 893
                    • New Albany, MS
                    • BT3100

                    #24
                    I probably should mulch them, but I don't like the look and my mower doesn't mulch them very fine. Besides which I have two large magnolia trees, (state tree of Mississippi) and the leaves are notoriously large and tough. I have a bagger attachment for my riding mower. We've been having so much rain lately I haven't been able to get to it yet.
                    - Chris.

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                    • dbhost
                      Slow and steady
                      • Apr 2008
                      • 9471
                      • League City, Texas
                      • Ryobi BT3100

                      #25
                      Originally posted by docrowan
                      I probably should mulch them, but I don't like the look and my mower doesn't mulch them very fine. Besides which I have two large magnolia trees, (state tree of Mississippi) and the leaves are notoriously large and tough. I have a bagger attachment for my riding mower. We've been having so much rain lately I haven't been able to get to it yet.
                      FWIW, I do mulch in my magnolia leaves, the spots where the leaves get mulched in, AND enough light gets through (That magnolia gives a LOT of shade) the grass is EXTREMELY strong, and fast growing, like having miracle grow on that part of the lawn...
                      Please like and subscribe to my YouTube channel. Please check out and subscribe to my Workshop Blog.

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