I'm just pleasantly surprised that we've not been hit out here in the traditional snow belt. Typically Edinboro & Waterford are on the buckle of the snow belt.Dang....
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Agreed. Weird that its pretty much staying north of 90. Not seeing much in Waterford?I'm just pleasantly surprised that we've not been hit out here in the traditional snow belt. Typically Edinboro & Waterford are on the buckle of the snow belt.
When the snow bands dropped past 90, things got ugly in Waterford. I bet we got 16" today. But...Penn State won!Agreed. Weird that its pretty much staying north of 90. Not seeing much in Waterford?
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I use my back blade and push the snow in reverse, the blade just seems to float over the snow and gravel nicely on its own. I thought about putting a piece of pvc pipe or something on the bottom of the blade but with backing up (with the blade facing the normal forward position) works so well I dont even think I need to do that. If there isnt enough snow though the blade isnt happy, so I usually dont do it until I have a nice packed down layer of snow on the gravel and the gravel is fully frozen.Please allow me to ask the dumb question of the week...
How do you deal with snow on a long gravel driveway?
I have a front snow blade and a rear blade. I lift the front blade an inch or two off the ground and I reverse the back blade, it swivels 180 degrees, so that it does not cut into the driveway. Basically when reversed it is like dragging a smooth surface and takes the snow without damaging the gravel. I angle both blades the same direction and have the ability to offset the back blade. When the ground freezes hard I will put the feet back on my front plow and that should give more control when plowing.Please allow me to ask the dumb question of the week...
How do you deal with snow on a long gravel driveway?