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Lawn Care Unplugged: How to Use a Reel Mower

When it’s time to mow your lawn this year, why not do it with less noise, no pollution, and some added health benefits? A reel mower is a superior alternative to a gas or electric rotary mower because it contributes less noise pollution and harmful emissions.

Lawn Care Unplugged - How to Use a Reel Mower

I love reel mowers, especially for small, urban lawns like mine. Reel mowers don’t use up a bunch of electric energy or gas. Instead, they give you a great workout.

Don’t be afraid, though; today’s reel mowers are designed so that they take very little effort to push, perhaps less so than a heavy gas or electric mower.

If that wasn’t enough, a reel mower gives your lawn a better cut by cleanly slicing the tops of the blades as opposed to chopping and tearing them.

If you are ready to make the switch, then read on, because this article lists everything you need to know about mowing with a reel mower.

How to Use a Reel Mower Push Mower

How to Use a Reel Mower

Reel mowers cleanly snip grass like a barber snipping your hair, while rotary mowers cut grass by chopping and tearing, resulting in a lawn that is susceptible to disease and pests. There are a few things to know to get the best cut with your reel mower. These tips will help you go unplugged forever.

You’re Mowing Too Often!

You are probably mowing more than you should. At most, mow your lawn every 5-7 days during peak growing seasons. Cool-season grasses such as bentgrass and ryegrass actively grow in the spring and fall. Warm-season grasses such as zoysia and buffalograss actively grow when it is warmer. You don’t need to know your grass type to figure it out, though. Just watch it grow!

Mow less frequently, if at all, during off-peak growing seasons. Grass is better off getting a little longer, allowing the plants to mature and set strong roots. If you let it go to seed before mowing, you will save yourself bags of grass seed in the process.

Lawn Care Unplugged - How to Use a Reel Mower

Know Your Ideal Height

Keep your lawn at its ideal height to promote vigorous growth and prevent weeds and heat damage. The minimum height of your lawn depends on a number of factors, such as grass type, season, and growing conditions.

Bentgrass (used commonly for golf courses) likes to be cut short from ¼” to ¾”, while grasses such as ryegrass (commonly used in lawns) like to be kept taller—between 1 ½” to 2 ½”.

Keep your lawn on the shorter side during the cool and/or wet spring months, but ensure your lawn is at its tallest recommended height during the hot and dry summer months. Taller grass has deeper roots, allowing it to dig deeper for moisture. The longer blades also shade the soil, reducing water loss and protecting the plants from sunburn.

Lawn Care Unplugged - How to Use a Reel Mower

Mowing Tall Grass

You should not cut more than one-third of the total grass height in a single cutting. If the grass is very long, it may take a few mows to cut it down to its ideal height. Give your lawn at least 2 days of rest between mows.

For example, if the ideal grass height is 2” and the current height is 4”, cut the lawn in two separate cuttings. The first cutting will reduce the lawn height by 1.3” maximum; the second cutting reduces it further by .6” to achieve 2” (for simplicity, remove 1” on the first cut and another 1” on the next cut).

Mowing Wet Grass

Ideally, it is best to hold off mowing your lawn when it is wet. A wet lawn is harder to mow because it lies flat and sticks together. Additionally, if your lawn is really saturated, you may actually cause soil compression from walking on it.

Lawn Care Unplugged - How to Use a Reel Mower

Leave Those Lawn Clippings Alone

Lawn clippings are a great nitrogen-rich fertilizer for your lawn. Don’t remove them unless they are diseased or are very long and won’t break down quickly. Mow your lawn and let the clippings fall where they may.

Sweep up the sidewalks and pavers, but leave the cut grass to mulch the soil. After a day or so, the clippings will have worked their way into the spaces between the blades, creating a moisture-holding mulch that will break down and feed the plant roots.

Clean Up the Edges

Just like a reel mower, grass shears are a superior alternative to a gas or electric trimmer. They are healthier for your grass, quieter, pollution-free, and simple to use. I like these Fiskars Grass Shears because they have blades that rotate from 45 to 360 degrees. This is really handy when trying to edge your lawn in awkward areas.

Lawn Care Unplugged - How to Use Grass Shears

Regular Care and Maintenance

Before the lawn care season begins, be sure to book an appointment with a lawn mower repair shop for annual maintenance. While you are there, book the fall appointment too; you need both a spring and fall service to be sure that your mower keeps working.

Kidding! That’s the service schedule for an electric or gas mower.

A reel mower needs almost no care. Get a blade-sharpening kit, and you can quickly and inexpensively sharpen the blades. You can clean it with a brush or the hose, and lubricate the joints with a silicone lubricant if it is getting stiff. The best part is that there is no motor to break, so you can do it all yourself. A reel mower is an investment that lasts indefinitely!

Lawn Care Unplugged - How to Use a Reel Mower

Ready, Set, Mow!

Think that using a reel mower is hard? Think again!

Steps:

  • Set the mower to the desired cut height
  • Mow and mindfully listen to the snip-snip-snip of the blades;
  • Brush off lawn clippings from the mower
  • Put the mower away

Simple as that! If you have a small yard, I highly recommend making the switch.

More Tips for Easy Lawn Care

Comments

  1. I remember using a push mower as a kid! They’re great, and they are an awesome way to cut back on noise, pollution, etc… I live in Redding California, where it is HOT HOT HOT and DRY DRY DRY. The lawn needs some pretty tender care to make it and would really benefit from a push mower that leaves behind the clippings, is easier to adjust, etc…

    Reply
  2. Hi! I live in Michigan. It’s been pretty wet here this year so far too. I would love to have Fiskar’s push mower to keep the grass down around my house. We have 6 acres so I’d be in super shape if I mowed the whole yard with it! (Isn’t gonna happen). Any money we can save not using gas would be super great! It really isn’t getting much cheaper. Thanks Fiskar for trying to help us save our planet!

    Reply
  3. We live in New Hampshire (USA), and our growing season is pretty short, so we try to make the best of it. My youngest child is absolutely petrified of the loud noise that our gas-powered mower makes, but loves playing outside, so a quiet reel mower would definitely be less scary to him. I would love anything that doesn’t break down and need so much maintenance. I swear I spend just as much time fixing the mower as I do mowing all summer!

    Reply
  4. Hi! I live in Tennessee and have fond childhood memories of using a reel mower as soon as I was tall enough to push it. This was one of my favorite chores, especially when I got too close to the mint along the side of the house — best smell of summer! Hubby does the mowing now on a gigantic zero-turn but there are places where it won’t fit or my plantings are endangered. Besides, I need the exercise.

    Reply
  5. Hello, I found your website through Pinterest. My husband and I are wanting to connect back to the earth by getting rid of our lawn service and caring for our lawn ourselves. We wish to be as environmentally friendly as possible and this reel mower looks to be the answer. We live in South Florida with St. Augustine grass. Truthfully I’ve never seen one of these mowers used in all my forty-five plus years living here. Thank you for your sponsor of this give-a-way. Happy gardening

    Reply

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