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Grass on Country Roads:

This is an new topic that has come up over the summer, and I'd like to hear the opinions of my agnostic friends. I have a lot of friends who are farmers and a lot of friends who ride motorcycles, and I'm curious to hear their thoughts on the issue of "grass on a country road". First from the farmer's side. If a farmer is farming 2560 acres in 1 mile squares, he will have 16 miles of roadside to mow. If he gets a large rotary mower, he can probably mow it in 2 passes, so that's 32 miles of dangerous tedious driving. For the non-farmers, mowing the roadsides is often dangerous work, the older brother of one of my friends from school was killed doing it. I've known several farmers who had to jump out of their tractors just before it tipped over. My father let me drive tractors starting at age 9, but he never let me mow roadsides. One of the things that makes it dangerous are people who drive by and throw things out of their cars and trucks to the roadside, not the least bit concerned about the safety of the farmer. If a farmer chooses to mow with a smaller lawn mower, he can probably to a better job controlling where the clippings go, but then he's looking at ~80 miles of driving rather than 32 miles of driving. From the motorcycle side, one of my father's best friends was killed on a 3 wheeler. I became a field engineering manager in 2001 because the old field engineering manager decided to go on a joy ride on his 49th birthday. He was driven into a guard rail by an careless driver, and he never made it out of the hospital. I know several doctors and nurses who are "on call" on weekends for emergencies, and during the summer months "on call" means "on duty" because they are almost always busy treating people who have smashed their skulls, severed their spines, broken their arms, legs, etc. in 2 wheeler, 3 wheeler, and 4 wheeler accidents. The question is "Should people who voluntarily choose to go on a joy ride in a vehicle that is 35 times more dangerous than a car expect a farmer to spend six to eight more hours mowing his roads each time on the chance that someone will come buzzing down the road on a motorcycle and not be prepared for grass on the road?" It's a tough question for me to answer. I'd like to hear the thoughts of some other people.

BD66 8 July 8
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I live in a farm area. The County mows the shoulders on the road side of the ditch. The only time I've seen farmers mowing is when they want lawn-like grass in front of their homes. In 66 years of mostly rural/small town living I've never heard of anybody having an accident because of the length or shortness of a rural grass shoulder.
OTOH I believe leaving ANYTHING on the road is illegal, whether it's grass( commercial mowers don't blow it, residential mowers can though all can be set to mulch or clowns who plow/blow their driveways onto the street.

That's news to me. Here in IL, it's the farmer's responsibility. I think it works better in your state, because if the township/county/state screws up and throws wet grass on the road and that takes out a motorcycle driver, it's a dispute between the motorcycle driver and the township/county/state. The farmers can go about their business and not worry about motorcycle riders riding down the roads adjacent to their farms.

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If even cows wander on it, grass will not grow on the actual roadway. Even my 11 lb dog has worn a grass less path in my backyard, using it 2-3 times a day only. And sticking to established paths, regardless of what vehicle you are using, does Far less environmental damage! And the farmer? He has a 36-hour day already!

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Sounds like you’ve already answered it ... and are merely challenging someone to disagree 😕 In my state, it’s illegal to allow ‘grass clippings’ to land on a public road. And, the state will mow alongside the roads, so there’s no need for a farmer or a homeowner to do it. It won’t be as pretty, but it won’t end up on the highway.

But the ‘landowners’ do, too often allowing wads of slimy grass clipping to litter the outside of a blind turn. Might they lose their farm in a lawsuit when an unexpected motorcyclist dies after sliding out on it?

It’s a hot topic in my neck of the woods, a motorcycle meca. And for me, with a new motorcycle … first in 30 years.. It’s pretty easy for me to figure which direction my mower’s throwing it’s clippings, and I don’t ‘bag them.’ So it’s sheer stupidity for anyone to allow them to fly onto a rural road. But, I see it all the time … here in ‘trump country.’

Varn Level 8 July 9, 2019

Actually, I think Virginia probably has the best solution. If it's a county road or a state road, the county or the state should maintain the roadside. That way if the motorcycle driver gets hurt by grass clippings from the road, it's a dispute between the motorcycle driver and the county or state. Farmers can go about their business of farming and not worry about being sued or arrested because motorcycle drivers were being reckless on the road next to the ground where they farm. We can't seem to get much right here in Illinois.

@BD66 I don’t ride reckless, though some do.. But have had to scrunch-up-tight to the centerline going through a blind turn to avoid grass plastered along the outside half of the roadway by a careless landowner. There’d be no dispute over what or who caused anyone to go down.

Sill learning the laws and customs of my adopted state, I find it strange that the State takes care of what in Oregon had been divided between County, City or State highways. I’m sure the interstates are Federal. And as mentioned by another, the State mows with a ‘sickle bar,’ just laying the grass down. Honestly, I’m more concerned with deer….

But there appears to be a ..competitive lawn care that takes place, where the landowner feels compelled to have his ditches match is front yard 🙂 It’s magnificently beautiful, and many do it … consequently, drawing riders from across the nation! So yah, I most often see ‘fresh grass’ ahead, but there’ve been several places it was downright dangerous, no matter how careful a rider 😕

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Thats the chance you take and the reason I don't have one . I've known too many who have died or have been crippled due to no fault of their own .

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I live in a rural city, lots of farms and motorcycles. No matter what you are driving, it's always up to the driver to determine road conditions and be prepared for the unexpected. Could be grass clippings, animals, slow moving farm equipment, or any road hazard.

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