» Thu Jun 10, 2010 11:50 pm
The problem is how fascist your town is in enforcing that rule.
Yeah, 8 inches is too long to start with, but if you've had non-stop rain, you'll need 2-3 days of no rain for the lawn to dry enough to be cuttable. Maybe, and I mean maybe, if it is a dry day and hot enough, at the late afternoon the grass will be dry enough to cut without gumming up your lawn mower.
Wet grass not only gums up in the mower, forcing you to turn it over and manually pull out clumps of wet grass, but it is not safe to cut...especially if your lawn involves slopes or hills. Grass can be slick when wet...never mind mud underneath.
I'd contact the code enforcement office and talk with someone there (since it sounds like they already have a complaint on you). Ask them what can be worked out because the weather is not productive to going out and mowing the lawn. Most people have some measure of common sense and will note on the complaint that you agree to cut the grass but need a couple days of dry weather for it to be both cuttable and safe to cut. If they won't budge, hire someone who will do the work for you or endure the nonsense and do it yourself.
Put your complaining neighbor on your poop list...they've earned it.
I had a landlord that required that I cut the grass regularly. I didn't mind that, but I really only had a short window of opportunity in any given week to do it with my work schedule (and I had to go to my parent's home to borrow their mower). I always let it grow enough to make mowing worth the hassle, and if it rained when I had the chance to do it, I couldn't (electric mower). The landlord came out and did it during the week when I was at work and complained about it. Ultimately, I just started paying my neighbor to do my lawn as well as his own since he was home most all the time. It was a lot faster, easier, and regular than trying to do it myself.