The Oklahoman

Next-gen homeowners go for greener yard tools

- Marni Jameson marni@ marnijames­on.com

Our lawn mower broke” — my daughter Paige was on the phone, calling from her new home in Texas that she and her longtime boyfriend, John, just moved into last month.

Like many first-time homeowners, John and Paige have big dreams and a dinky budget.

“The one you guys just bought?” I asked.

They’d gotten a deal on a basic electric-corded mower the week before.

“Our yard was too much for it,” she said, dispirited. “John ran it into a tall patch of grass, and the motor burned out. The repair will take three to four weeks; by then the grass will be up to our chins.”

Aw, home-ownerhood.

By the time Paige and John got the keys to their singlestor­y brick ranch house, the yard hadn’t been mowed for several weeks. The ⅓-acre lot looked more like the Tallgrass Prairie than a yard in suburbia.

All I could think was, “What are the neighbors saying?”

Then, pop, an idea. I’d been wondering what to get Paige and John as a housewarmi­ng gift. A new top-of-the-line lawn mower and edger would cut (sorry) several ways:

It would let me get them something they couldn’t yet afford, help them maintain their big yard, and keep them from being a pox on the ’hood. (I have a reputation to maintain, after all.)

Only one problem: I didn’t know the first thing about buying a lawn mower. John, however, a mechanical engineer working toward his doctorate in environmen­tal engineerin­g, was just the guy to sort through the mechanical mumbo jumbo.

The push mower options are gas powered, the most common; electric corded, which comes with a cord you have to maneuver like you do with a vacuum cleaner; and electric-battery powered, green, clean but more expensive.

“Growing up, we had a gas mower,” John said. But like many consumers today, he wanted something greener and just as powerful. “Those emissions can’t be good for you or the environmen­t.” That led him to buy the electric-corded mower, which ultimately didn’t hack it.

“So, if you could have any lawn mower?” I said. And the shopping began.

A look at the 2018 Consumer Reports showed the highestrat­ed battery-powered push mower was an Ego. At $499 — twice the price of what they’d paid for the corded Sears Craftsman mower (RIP), which the store let them return — the reviews said it was “worth the splurge” if you had a large or hilly yard. And its cutting power equaled the top-rated gas mower’s.

John got excited as only an engineer can about the 56-volt arc-lithium battery with triple-cell technology.

Because we didn’t want to let any more grass grow under their feet, I had an Ego self-propelled mower and string trimmer express shipped to their house. Happy housewarmi­ng.

On its maiden voyage, the Ego plowed through the embarrassi­ngly overgrown lawn that in some areas had grown to 8 inches. Paige and John took turns mowing and edging.

After an hour and a half, the lawn mower’s battery needed to recharge, and so did they. Twenty minutes later, the mower and they were ready to finish the yard.

How’d it go? I asked, calling for a report. “The lawn looks like the White House lawn,” Paige said, “and the neighbors are happy, too.”

“Oh?” I perk up.

John explained: “The first words I spoke to one of our neighbors was when she rolled down her car window and said, ‘Are you mowing? That is the quietest lawn mower I’ve ever heard.’ ”

Good mowers make good neighbors.

After Paige and John had stress-tested their new yard tools, I called Ego for some more scoop, and learned this about the new generation of power yard tools:

• Popularity

Five years ago sales of cordless yard tools accounted for less than 15 percent of the market, said Joe Turoff, spokesman for Ego. Today, the sales of lithium-batterypow­ered mowers, blowers and string trimmers combined is approachin­g 25 percent of the market and is the fastestgro­wing segment.

• Power

One reason for the growth is that lithium-battery technology keeps getting better. Until recently, electric-battery mowers didn’t measure up to their gas counterpar­ts.

“We didn’t want to bring a mower to market until it could deliver the same power as the best out there,” said Turoff, whose electric-battery yard tools hit stores in 2014.

Indeed, Consumer Reports says they cut as well as any gas mower.

• Performanc­e

Gas mowers have been market leaders because they rate high on performanc­e, but they’re loud and smelly. The new generation of lithiumbat­tery yard tools are clean, green and quiet. You can’t hear them through a closed window.

“We use the same kind of battery as the Tesla,” said Turoff, adding that the batteries can withstand heat, water and being dropped.

• Endurance

Lithium-battery powered motors run out of juice after about an hour to an hour and a half, Turoff said. The battery will fully recharge in 60 minutes, and is good for up to 20,000 recharges over its life, so can last decades.

• Other pluses

The self-propelled model had a “transporta­tion mode,” which Paige appreciate­d. “It took itself up the hill like a little robot,” she said. The handle also folds up, so the equipment takes up less space in the garage.

• Disposal

Though you won’t be tossing it for a while, when a lithium battery does die, you can’t just drop it in the trash. Like lead batteries, lithium batteries need to be disposed of at a home improvemen­t store.

Syndicated columnist Marni Jameson is the author of three home and lifestyle books, including “Downsizing the Family Home: What to Save, What to Let Go” (Sterling Publishing 2016). You may reach her at www.marni jameson.com.

 ?? [PHOTO PROVIDED BY JOHN PEDERSON] ?? At her new home, the author’s daughter test drives the next generation of lithium-battery-powered mowers, which are greener, cleaner and quieter.
[PHOTO PROVIDED BY JOHN PEDERSON] At her new home, the author’s daughter test drives the next generation of lithium-battery-powered mowers, which are greener, cleaner and quieter.
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