Editor’s Pick
AUGUST 27, 2011 6:44PM

The Leaf Blower and the End of the World

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 leafblower 

 

The gardeners are back today.

Collectively, working at different times at all the houses in the wealthy neighborhood where I rent a small house, the noise level they create renders this particular patch of luxury real estate almost uninhabitable throughout the summer. The irony used to please me; now I find it debilitating and sad.  I listen to the toxic symphony of two-stroke engines: lawn mowers, weed-wackers, hedge trimmers and most of all – worst of all – the leaf blowers, and I see the end of modern society looming in their fumes and racket.

          The leaf blower stands for so much that has gone wrong in our world in my lifetime. We used to take care of the leaf problem by raking them into piles and burning them. Autumn was scented by leaf smoke in those days. But the rake is too much trouble, too quiet, too simple; it requires too little fossil fuel, and with an irksome physical modesty refuses to impose itself on the world around it as the almost military leaf blower does. Engines raging, exhaust spewing, leaves flying, you can feel like a serious job is getting done.

          And what exactly does the leaf blower do, for all the noise pollution and air pollution it creates? It moves leaves around. It pushes them from Mr. Johnson’s yard in to Mr. Constable’s yard; tomorrow Mr. Constable’s gardeners will come and push them back. So the leaves migrate senselessly in a grotesque waste of fuel, energy, time, money and aggravation, and no one seems to notice but me.

          But this is what we do now: we create machines to accomplish what were once simple tasks in the most tortuous and destructive way possible in the name of progress. Look at the feed lots of the Midwest, which have replaced the grazing cow whose dung fertilized the grass it ate in a perfectly sustainable closed system. Now we feed the cows corn to make them grow fast enough to be profitable, and store their wastes in vast lakes that are contaminating the whole continental aquifer; and since the cows cannot really digest corn, since it makes them sick in fact, we have to pump them full of antibiotics which make their way into the body chemistry of the millions of people who eat the beef, eventually dismantling a century of progress in the fight against disease.

          We replace loosely built old timber houses with hermetically sealed, climate-controlled fortresses whose very air-tight perfection breeds mold and mildew and rot. “House kits” assembled on your lot are now guaranteed for twenty years! What a bargain! The house I live in was built a hundred and fifty years ago, and it’s doing just fine, thank you.

          When a big meat packer bought Park’s sausages, they soon realized that the little family-owned company was using overly expensive ingredients and manufacturing the links in a slow and in efficient manner. A team of corporate experts tackled the problem and soon they found bargain materials and streamlined the manufacturing process. On paper it was a coup for smart management --  a new era of profitability. The only problem was, the sausages tasted horrible and no one bought them.  No one had considered that minor detail in the overhaul. Sales got so bad that the Parks family was finally able to buy the company back and rebuild it.

          There aren’t many stories with happy endings like that.

It’s hard to fight progress.

When my Ford Escape’s exhaust manifold disintegrated at the 60,000 mile mark, (timed perfectly to match the warranty’s expiration), I complained to the service guy at the dealership, remarking that my father drove a 1959 Rolls Royce while he lived in England from 1968 to 1975. He sold it when he came back to the ‘States, for exactly what he had paid for it. All he ever did was put gasoline in the tank and change the oil. What made that car so much better than my Escape? “Well, those parts were all machined individually,” the guy informed me “They’re filed down by hand, measured to tolerances we don’t even think about, by guys who’ve been doing it all their lives. They apprentice for ten years before they even get to hold a tool in their hands. And I’m talking tools. They use calipers, for chrissake.” He lowered he voice, leaned across the counter. “Everything on your car was made as cheap and fast as it could be made, out of the cheapest grade crumbiest materials we could buy on the international market. We use aluminum and plastic. They used steel. So whatdaya expect?”

I expect new things to fall apart and old things to work: like the 1950s vintage sunbeam toaster I picked up at dump that has outlasted all its modern counterparts; like the manual Olympia typewriter I’ll probably go back to using when the last computer dies, like the antique couch whose springs and fabric remain firm and close-stitched while the fancy I sofa I bought two years ago is already falling apart.

I expect people to be lazy and machines to be elaborately. useless

I expect people to embrace music machines whose ‘earbuds’ are making them deaf, and ‘smart phones’ that can’t hold a connection, and a government that steals their liberty and their privacy and their hope of a comfortable old age for no other purpose than to secure the wealth and power of the modern Pharaohs who own their world. Nothing else works – why should the government? I expect more tomatoes grown from Florida sand with the help of a hundred chemicals, picked with slave labor and turned red in a gas chamber. I expect more bad movies made by committee, more ‘tailored’ suits glued together in sweat shops.

I expect things to decline, to subside, to fail. I expect to see the world improved to death. And tomorrow morning, I expect the leaf blowers.

I can always count on them

 

 

 

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Poignant, funny, sad and altogether true.
Interesting piece... you had me from the title. Hopefully the storm will keep the gardeners at bay for 12 hours... but THEN come the chain saws. r.
Although I agree that the world driven by profit rather than quality is doing terrible things to basic respect for many of the better ideals of life, I still find my computer lets me easily tap into the the dynamic flux of the world far better than anything in the past. As someone who has lived a rather long time I remember that the older horrors were as bad or worse than the current ones. One tends to remember fondly the wonders of a more primitive times and push into obscurity the old miseries. I hate leaf blowers too.
Simply superb and sublime, at the same time.


-R-
What can be said about something so clear, so precise and so telling?

Amazing and well done.

-r-
I guess the more things progress, they more they do not.

This was a sublime piece.
I too love all our modern “progress”. We are surely progressing ourselves right into regressing.

Well, at least I don’t have to wake up at 4:AM when that damn rooster starts to crow; is there any alarm clock ever mad that is as annoying as that damn bird?!! You’ll never know how hard I tried to get my mom to let me chose the “chicken” for Sunday dinner!

Don’t remember church bells on Sunday being awfully pleasant either...
i hate that we're all beginning to sound like curmudgeons. if i agree with you, does that mean we're old? leaf blowers are the bane of a good neighborhood. whatever happened to rakes?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joMK1WZjP7g
I'm sure that the plastic will outlast us.
I hate those leaf blowers. Great post. Thanks
Great post, Steve. I loved the laugh I got out of it…and certainly had no difficulty identifying with it in spades.

Ummm…looking at it from another direction, however, would it help at all if the coffee came before the creative typing?
Uplifting, Steve!

(pm me if you get to feeling low, I'll commiserate privately)
Oh, and if it makes you feel any better I still have a rake and a pushmower somewhere in the garage. Wonder why I don't use them? shiftless laziness no doubt. Ungreen of me, I know. If they can create a blow dryer and a garbage disposal that are almost soundless, why not yard equipment? Anyone ever heard of a muffler, dagnabit!?
Great piece, spot on with many of the truths we experience in modern society. How the world has changed and become so much "better". Gah. You are one heck of a writer and this is just a great piece for the New Yorker...
Forgive me for maybe a stupid question, but why don't you go rent somewhere else? Or are leaf blowers sold by the millions so that no corner of the USA is without them....presumably you are just trying to make a point

I am old enough to remember the slave-like daily life of women first and then men without those terrible machines....happy days then for those few that could buy those luxurious Rolls....those same people that had their slave-like servants in the downstairs of their mansions

But if you pine for some good old tasting tomatoes and you can't really find them over there, give us a shout we have plenty of those in the hills over here

Sorry, but unlike others that have commented on this post i don't see either humour or poignancy, just a bit of whining, for sure, as it seems to be the fashion
roberto -- thanks for your comment. I do think you missed my point, though. I wasn't pining for the days of top hats and high powered luxury vehicles, merely for a now-extinct interest in quality workmanship and materials. The sunbeam toaster I mentioned was hardly a luxury item.
Leaf-blowers are a seasonal nuisance where I live. To move out because of three-months of noise pollution a year (which I mostly avoid anyway, since I work the same hours as the gardeners), would exhibit the level of spoiled-brat petulance you attribute to me. Sorry, I just can't quite gin it up. Tomatoes are also seasonal and anyone who wants to avoid Florida's slave-grown, chemical- laden winter tomatoes can simply not buy them, which is my own cunning strategy. I raked leaves my whole childhood without ever feeling like a slave. I'm not against labor saving machines, just the ones that burn lost of fossil fuel, make horrible noises and accomplish nothing. Wait! That sounds like the US Army in Iraq. The leaf blower is a good metaphor, if nothing else. But observation isn't whining. If you want to hear whining, get me started on mean customers, rude tourists and the dog poop on my lawn.
Amen. Raking leaves is good exercise for those who do it themselves. A leaf blower does nothing but bust your eardrums.

I've seen lawn guys chasing one leaf up and down a driveway like it was a hockey puck to get it to the right place. Easier just to pick it up.
I worked as a gardener for many years. Raked. No leaf blowing. Wanted it faster for less ? Hire that guy. I was busy without that nonsense.
This made me think of the pressure placed on me to do something about my yard in the neighborhood we used to live in. They were incensed that i didn't have a monoculture fescue lawn, mowed in geometric crisscross lines, subscribe to a monthly visit by the chemical fertilizer company, and manicure my shrubs in some ridiculous topiary.
I am in total agreement with your premise. And now I'm really depressed.
I personally marked the death of civilization when the "Dukes of Hazzard" movie starring Jessica Simpson as Daisy made it to No. 1 at the box office some years ago.

www.runningwithstilettos.com
"But the rake is too much trouble, too quiet, too simple; it requires too little fossil fuel..."
Agreed! My children and I cross the street when we come upon a leaf blower while I mumble to myself about the stink and the noise.
Thank you for writing this!
I forgot to add that when James Lipton, host of the Actor's Studio, gets to the question, "What sound or noise do you hate?", my answer would be, "jack hammer", but it could as easily be leaf blower. I completely agree with you about the decline of civilization. I found myself going to the computer one morning to find out if it was raining. I knew then that I was becoming hopelessly estranged from the natural world.
steve, thanks for your reply , but i am not really looking forward for the real whining :)
We have german dw that you cannot hear and is very energy efficient and other items of high quality which, like your toaster, have not had any visit by the bogeymen of modern times for repairs (they range from 10 to 15 yrs)...but this is low brow compared to to the blower as a metaphor....but there you go, just mention the war, either for or more so against, to give anything special meaning
Leaves should be raked, yes, but then NOT BURNED! Actually our nearby town collects leaves for a municipal compost. I snaggle a few dozen bags off the street before they get collected. Not that I don't have plenty of leaves here, but I like 'em pre-bagged. I cover my garden in the fall and save a few bags to use as weed-killing mulch in the spring. But same difference - careless waste of resources...
I loved this. I can't remember the last time I read an essay that was so dead-on-target.
ahhh, the end of the world as we know it - or knew it. Imagine, one day -- sooner than not -- we'll be looking back at the petroleum powered tools we use, just as you now view the hand-tooled steel-clad Rolls. Our times... a'changing.
Couldn't agree more. The leaf blowers were blowing here as I read your piece. The noice destroys my peace. We are the only one of two on our block who rake and mow the old fashioned way. And we are archaic in other ways. Everyone else has finished basements, and thus, everyone else had serious flood damage to their carpets and stuff left in the basement. We have an old house, built with a deep well in the basement, the trap can be opened, and there are troughs all along the sides. Thus we got a little water which emptied out fast and naturally. Sometimes old fashioned things are beautiful, like our scalloped windows, sometimes they are practical, like our cold room. It all saddens me, but many of us still can make our only little spot or plot simple and chemical/pollution/machine free.
A neighbor wields a 71 dB-at-50-feet-monster four seasons a year, blowing even snow with the thing strapped to his back. It would seem were he to point the thing straight down he would become airborne. And he has been known to blow every square inch of his property in a symphony of mind destruction lasting hours at a time...and then, and then, he blows the street for two lots down, all the way to the park. Oh yes, there is a Hell. It is gas-powered, with a trigger throttle and a long, long cone, and holds infernal appeal to twisted minds everywhere!
Pollutes, noisey, lazy obesity, passes your problem to another = the new American dream
Great essay. The simple act of leaf raking gives me time to think. With the repeated motion of stretching my arms out and gathering leaves into a pile, I organize thoughts and settle my mind, creating a little bit of peace in my corner of the universe.

Pass the rake. Down with leaf blowers.
I only know the electric leaf blower (which only gets used a few times on my roof... don't ask - unusual situation)
However - handy hint!
When cleaning out that rental car before returning it, it's actually easier to blow it out with a leaf blower than to vacuum it.
not many people could afford rollies, the men who built them came to work on bicycles, not out of environmental awareness but out of poverty.

throwaway machines have a purpose, they distribute wealth in societies where few hunt, fish, or farm. the trick is in recycling, which is beginning to penetrate even corporate consciousness.

i sympathize with your feelings, those leafblowers are a curse, but while we are 6 billion, they have a reason.
sometimes I read your stuff and all I can do is sigh, thumbs up, and move on.