I did it. Mowed the yard and pruned rose bushes and cutback some vines trying to grow up the bricks. I’ve gotten better at minding where the cord is and where the mower is – no close calls today. I also am becoming more adept at planning how to mow so the cord stays between me and my starting point – easy to do if you’re mowing a circle, but a little tricky with trees and bushes and light poles.
The hardest thing to realize when you are using an electric mower is that you do not have to keep the motor running or be faced with a pull cord re-start. No, it is just like a light switch. Squeeze and you go, release and you stop . . . immediately. Actually, once you grasp this, it is tempting to stand there and go on/off, on/off, on/off. Childish, but tempting.
No Wubbas were harmed today although before I started mowing, I was picking up a bit by the fence and lying there where my hand was reaching was a brown spotted longish thin thing. It turned out to be one of the “legs” on the leopard Wubba. Come to think of it, maybe that was Wubba Revenge.
When faced with the te,ptation of doing bodily harm to a Wubba just remember W W W D what would Wanda Do