Vacuum leaf collection served 42,000 families from the 1960s until now

Michael Smee · CBC News

  • AstralPath
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    7 months ago

    I love how this is getting an equal amount of down votes. There is nothing wrong with wanting a clean yard or a nice lawn. If you own property, you’re free to do with it as you please. If a green lawn is your thing, you’re gonna have to rake. Leaving leaves in your yard over the winter makes for a nice rotten sludge in the springtime that can cause issues with grass growth underneath it. It’s also pretty gnarly to clean up compared to nice dry fluffy piles of leaves in autumn even after it dries up.

    I get the homeowners being pissed off about losing the service because damn does it suck to have to rake your lawn every year. It can be a lot more labor intensive than you might imagine. I’d whinge about it a bit too if I had it easy like these folks did since the 60s. Ultimately, it’s not that big a deal since all they need to do is just bag the leaves and leave them by the roadside. They’re already halfway there since they previously needed only to rake them to the roadside.

    This service was incredibly wasteful and likely should have never existed in the first place so the $2.3M savings will likely do a lot of good elsewhere (hopefully for services for disadvantaged folks in the area).

    My question is how have we not figured out how to make something practical out of autumn leaves like a new kind of paper or something like that? I can only imagine that if someone was to develop some kind of use for bulk leaves like that they’d have people ringing their phones off the hook for pickup every year. I’d certainly be signing up for pickup. It would save me a solid 5hrs of cleanup in my yard.

    • JJROKCZ@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      5
      ·
      7 months ago

      All the work, materials, and water put into keeping all these lawns perfect green mono-culture carpets is incredibly wasteful and not good for the loca ecosystem. We wonder why the bees are dying off then look at miles upon miles of suburbia with nothing but grass and the occasional tulip or hydrangea bush as landscaping

      • AstralPath
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        7 months ago

        FYI I don’t water my lawn or fertilize it in any way. I just rake leaves in the winter so that grass (and a fuckload of dandelions - love em) can grow ASAP in spring without a layer of dead leaves blocking the sun.