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Kogan and Skalinder said that, considering their yards are the size of apartment bedrooms, power mowers didn't seem necessary.
"I felt a gas-powered (mower) was a little over the top for my needs," said Skalinder, adding he didn't want to use the kind of screaming power mower that keeps him awake when he's trying to nap.
Those are welcome words to those in the manual lawn mower business, who well know the hold that big, roaring machines have on the public. "For a lot of people power is the thing," said McClain.
Even for all his talk about a "green lifestyle," Grisius wondered if he really wanted to buy a powerless lawn mower.
"There was a little bit of ... do I want to be the only guy on the block with a reel mower?" he said.
Luckily for the manual mower business, there is a whole segment of the population that isn't enamored with power tools or worried about looking wimpy: women.
"We noticed very quickly that two out of three people buying manual mowers were female," said Terry Jarvis, president of Sunlawn Inc., a Fort Collins, Colo.-based company that's been selling the mowers for 10 years and making its own for two.
"Women like the simplicity of the machines, the fact that they work." he said. "I constantly hear women commenting, 'I love the useful exercise.'"
Melissa Vesper, 32, of Arlington, Texas, appreciates how she can spend time with her two small children while she's mowing -- something she couldn't do with a noisy gas mower that turned pebbles and twigs into projectiles.
"I can hear them and not worry about things getting flung at them," she said.
Nobody suggests that manual mowers -- still rare enough that Kogan's neighbors confessed they didn't realize they still existed -- are going to push power mowers aside.
Reel mowers, which Hundley said many people buy over the Internet, increasingly are showing up in large hardware chains and small mom-and-pop places alike. But Hundley said stores aren't likely to let push mowers that cost about $200 or less to take valuable display place from power mowers that can cost hundreds of dollars more.
"They'd rather sell an $800 Toro they make a couple hundred bucks on than (make) a few bucks on a push mower," he said.
Still, some owners say they plan on sticking with manual mowers -- and maybe get others to follow.
"I hope my neighbors see me," said Skalinder. "I hope people see it and I can offer them a loaner (and) get more people to use them."
On the Web:
American Lawn Mower Co.:
https://www.reelin.com/
Clean Air Gardening: http://www.cleanairgardening.com/index.html
[Text copied from file received from AP Digital; article by Don Babwin, Associated Press writer]
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