If you're smart you just run the cord out in a pattern so as you mow it gently pulls along perpendicular to the rows you're mowing, and you don't run it over. I've had cordless tools, and the batteries always die, and they're always painfully expensive, and the manufacturers are constantly changing which batteries they use, so now all my electric tools are corded. I can put them away in their cupboard and not touch them for 20 years, then when I take them out they'll still work perfectly.
The most frustrating part about manufacturers changing batteries is they're just changing the housing. Unless the voltage is different it's probably the same ones inside.
No matter how you handle the cord, you have to handle it. Biggest part of my lawn was 1.5h with cable, now 45 min with battery. Yes, batteries are expensive, when you go cordless you choose _one_ system. The same batteries go into the string trimmer and a possible yet-to-buy hedge trimmer.
CeeSA
Killing green.
4sambucas
yup
IronRod
Leave the flowers alone you monster!
Salpinus
No mow May! This also includes the months prior to may. Pollinators needs food, you need pollinators for your food. Leave the flowers be(-e), please!
Admineral
Onestepcloser5
Meh
hellfirerains
But that's just grass? Why would you grow grass for food?
Please recognize the joke here
dReDone
Incoming AKSHAWLY
harmsebamse
Noooo, not the bees food!
pixelsnader
The bees' needs!
MrCement
Definitely too early to mow
MeatPopsicleMultiPass
I already mowed and we definitely have dandelions.
Gayforbae
Depends where you are. We've had enough rain and false springs that grass was halfway up shins March 1st.
Mithi
If that one dies, get a battery powered one with 2(!) sets of batteries. Gamechanger not to schlepp the cord around.
vetteritt64
Not to schlepp the Kabel is always gut.
lysani
Got an electric Ryobi mower a few years back, and though pricey up front it was worth it.
ChristopherHallett
If you're smart you just run the cord out in a pattern so as you mow it gently pulls along perpendicular to the rows you're mowing, and you don't run it over. I've had cordless tools, and the batteries always die, and they're always painfully expensive, and the manufacturers are constantly changing which batteries they use, so now all my electric tools are corded. I can put them away in their cupboard and not touch them for 20 years, then when I take them out they'll still work perfectly.
pleaseconsiderthatImightbejoking
The most frustrating part about manufacturers changing batteries is they're just changing the housing. Unless the voltage is different it's probably the same ones inside.
Mithi
No matter how you handle the cord, you have to handle it. Biggest part of my lawn was 1.5h with cable, now 45 min with battery. Yes, batteries are expensive, when you go cordless you choose _one_ system. The same batteries go into the string trimmer and a possible yet-to-buy hedge trimmer.
ChristopherHallett
It's not my fault you couldn't figure out how to lay the cord out properly and always be mowing away from it.