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On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 18:53:48 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote: "John H." wrote in message .. . Yeah well anyway...gravel ends up getting shoved into the same end of the parking lot where the snow goes, leaving bare ground and mud. Then, it needs to be redistributed in the spring. It also provides an endless supply of rocks to be thrown by vandals. The operator raises the blade of the plow so as not to scrape the gravel. It's not like plowing pavement where the blade must ride on the surface. A half inch or so of snow on gravel makes little difference to the traction. Are the vandals in your community prevented from vandalizing by paved lots? At any point in the past, have you made any observations of how kids behave? Absolutely! -- John H. "Divide each difficulty into as many parts as is feasible and necessary to resolve it." Rene Descartes |
#2
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![]() "John H." wrote in message ... On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 18:53:48 GMT, "Doug Kanter" wrote: "John H." wrote in message . .. Yeah well anyway...gravel ends up getting shoved into the same end of the parking lot where the snow goes, leaving bare ground and mud. Then, it needs to be redistributed in the spring. It also provides an endless supply of rocks to be thrown by vandals. The operator raises the blade of the plow so as not to scrape the gravel. It's not like plowing pavement where the blade must ride on the surface. A half inch or so of snow on gravel makes little difference to the traction. Are the vandals in your community prevented from vandalizing by paved lots? At any point in the past, have you made any observations of how kids behave? Absolutely! Right. So you know that even a relatively OK kid, when presented with a sudden richness of rocks, will pick on up and throw it, even if he knows he'll catch hell when it breaks something. |
#3
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On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 19:22:55 GMT, "Doug Kanter"
wrote: "John H." wrote in message .. . On Fri, 11 Nov 2005 18:53:48 GMT, "Doug Kanter" wrote: "John H." wrote in message ... Yeah well anyway...gravel ends up getting shoved into the same end of the parking lot where the snow goes, leaving bare ground and mud. Then, it needs to be redistributed in the spring. It also provides an endless supply of rocks to be thrown by vandals. The operator raises the blade of the plow so as not to scrape the gravel. It's not like plowing pavement where the blade must ride on the surface. A half inch or so of snow on gravel makes little difference to the traction. Are the vandals in your community prevented from vandalizing by paved lots? At any point in the past, have you made any observations of how kids behave? Absolutely! Right. So you know that even a relatively OK kid, when presented with a sudden richness of rocks, will pick on up and throw it, even if he knows he'll catch hell when it breaks something. Any kid who wants to throw something will find many things to throw. So we're going to let the earth melt 'cause some kid wants to throw rocks? -- John H. "Divide each difficulty into as many parts as is feasible and necessary to resolve it." Rene Descartes |
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