Stick to baseball, 5/13/22.

For subscribers to The Athletic, I posted a minor league scouting notebook, with comments on players from the Red Sox, Orioles, Rays, and Nats systems. My first mock draft for 2022 will go up on Thursday, May 19th, and I’ll do some sort of chat or Q&A around it that afternoon.

At Polygon, I reviewed Ark Nova, the best new game I’ve played so far this year, a more complex title that draws heavily on Terraforming Mars but with streamlined rules and better art.

I sent out a new edition of my free email newsletter yesterday, and I have to thank all of you who’ve sent such kind replies. I mentioned the possibility of an in-person event in London in August, and it looks like we’re going to be able to make that happen, with the help of a reader who works at a bookshop there. Speaking of books, Smart Baseball and The Inside Game are both available in paperback, and you can buy them at your local independent book store or at Bookshop.org.

On The Keith Law Show, I got the band back together with Eric Karabell for a show last week. I was on the move most of this week (and then traveled again Thursday night) and didn’t have a recording window until Thursday morning morning, so I recorded next week’s episode with guest Jonathan Higgs of Everything Everything.

And now, the links…

Comments

  1. A lawn takes almost nothing to maintain. I’ve had lawns at all my homes over the last 20 years and I’ve never used a single chemical or added a drop of water that didn’t come from the sky. Lawns aren’t the problem, obsessive suburbanite homeowners are the problem.

    • I’m with you Mike. I have a big lawn, but I do very little to it. Sure, it takes a beating in the Georgia Summer, but the brown grass never hurt anyone and it always bounces back with the next rainfall.

      On the other hand, when I’m pushing my mower around the yard, I do sometimes wish for an alternative.

  2. The biggest problem with grass is not In areas that get a lot of growing season rain, it’s in places like California, Nevada, and Arizona where grass has no business growing. And lawns do require a lot of other maintenance, too, with that small engine being a major source of summer time air pollution.

    Typo: the David Simon series is We Own This City. We Built This City is the greatest song of all-time.

    • Fixed the typo, even with your horrendous musical opinions. 🙂

      And yes, that’s the issue with lawns. There’s basically nowhere you can grow a lawn of regular grass in the US without either requiring a lot of water or using a lot of gas to mow it – and in almost any environment you’ll need some kind of chemical treatment, like weed preventers/killers. I say this as someone with a large lawn, too, although we’ve already removed some of it to make room for other things like vegetable beds.

    • I borrowed my neighbor’s battery powered lawn mower last year and I had no problem completing the lawn (about a 1/4 acre with a decent slope in the back) in one charge. It could go up to 45 mins on one charge, so if you have about a 1/2 acre or less, it might suit your needs. I will be getting one once my current mower is done. But of course there is a lot of other lawn equipment where the gas powered version is usually more powerful, whether it is an edger, trimmer, leaf blower, snow blower, etc. If I had more trees in my yard or a bigger yard, I’d almost have to invest in a gas powered leaf blower. The battery powered blower I have now just barely does the job.

    • You have not convinced me that it’s the greatest song of all time, but you have convinced me to listen to it again.

  3. But nobody *needs* to water or use chemicals or fertilizers. That’s a choice because people feel like they need perfect lawns. At my house we embrace the dandelions and clover that grow. No chemicals, no water, battery mowers.

    If a lawn can’t be sustained without using water or chemicals then I agree you shouldn’t have a lawn at all. Why go through the expense and effort, never mind the environmental cost.

  4. We Built This City was a joke!!!

  5. No water or chemicals or fertilizer on our lawn, which we care for using the EGO line of battery-powered tools (lawn mower, hedge trimmer, weed whacker, leaf blower, and snow blower as well, all of which work very well). And our electricity comes from 100% renewable sources, so we’re good on that front as well.

  6. Keith, we’re just under half an acre total for the lot. the house takes up some of that, and we have some trees in the back corner that take up a bit more. maybe a 0.20-0.25 acre of grass? It takes slightly more than 1 big battery’s worth of charge to cut all the grass, but we need 2 big batteries for the snow blower, and swapping the batteries is quick and easy, so I usually swap as I pass the garage on my way from the front yard to the back yard. We have 2 smaller batteries for the other equipment, that we swap into whichever tool is currently needed.

  7. Aside from the water usage, and chemical usages to maintain a lawn… lawns are generally HORRIBLE ecosystems. They reduce soil health and biodiversity, and are pretty poor air filters.

    We’ve been working to replace our grass with native ground covers and plants that will attract polinators, other insects, and birds. Less maintenance, more ecosystem health.