It's a VERY VERY bad idea to burn the leftover grass and leaves during a windy day; however, do you know of any tricks that might solve this problem?
I tried using a small metal bucket except that it's taking forever and ever to burn anything in it.
It's a VERY VERY bad idea to burn the leftover grass and leaves during a windy day; however, do you know of any tricks that might solve this problem?
I tried using a small metal bucket except that it's taking forever and ever to burn anything in it.
There's no tip or trick to burning grass and leaves on a windy day. You answered the question yourself, it's a VERY VERY bad idea. Fire can spread very rapidly in wind and, depending on conditions, could easily spread a mile in minutes. Not only could your life, and others nearby be in danger...you are also risking your property and other's property.
If you absolutely need it burnt (don't want to compost it), then it would be best to store the material in a wind-proof spot, or in a container of some kind, and then burn it after the wind is gone. I personally think it is a waste of organic material, just burning it. It would make a wonderful carbon base for a compost pile. Carbonaceous material burned to ashes don't do your land nearly as much good good as the same material would if composted. Anyway, that is an option to consider.
Depending on your local laws it might be forbidden to burn so-called "garden waste".
IMO for good reason: keep in mind, burning any organic material does not only produce CO2. CO2 is invisible, so all the smoke is "something else". There is stream of course, steam is white. The gray/dark part is what should worry people. This is the stuff creating sour rain and that smell. Of course some of the toxic parts are invisible as well.
You should consider every alternative. Composting, Creating leaf-mold in plastic bags, giving it to your neighbors who know of the value of leaves, bringing it to the dump yard/composting yard.
You should never burn grass. Ever. It is even worse than leaves regarding the toxic emissions.
Just don't burn mother nature's fruits. Sorry for getting too romantic.
The only things you should be burning would be specifically diseased materials where composting them could perpetuate disease. Otherwise, don't burn the materials, period. Grass clippings make a wonderful mulch and compost easily, for instance. Leaves turn into leaf mold, one of the nicest materials you can introduce your garden to.
Using a bucket to burn in does not increase safety significantly on a windy day, as embers and lightweight burning material can be blown out of the bucket by wind passing over the top and start fires. A bucket is also not a particularly effective combustor as there is only one way for oxygen (air) to get into it - through the open top.
If, and only if, you have a mass of diseased plant material to dispose of and for some reason (what, I can't imagine) needed to do so on a windy day without simply waiting for a non-windy day, then you would need a stove or incinerator with screening to contain sparks, (also known as a "spark arrestor" on the exhaust side, but you need to contain sparks from the intake side as well) so the materials could be burned without the possibility of sparks, embers or entire flaming bits of material being picked up by the wind (or sucked/blown out the stove-pipe) and causing a fire elsewhere.
And indeed, in many cases the local authorities will take a dim view of ANY burning on a windy day, and un-needed burning on any day.