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Organize a #Snowcrew Yeti Shoveling Party

This winter has been brutal, and there is more snow on the way. So how are we going to get through this? Together!

This weekend, I drove up from DC to help shovel and get first-hand experience of what Snowcrew.org volunteer Yetis have been experiencing. Of the six places I've dug out so far, the ones I shoveled out with other Yetis went a lot faster and were much for fun.

Below is a plan that Brendan from WalkBoston and I have come up with to make shoveling more fun so that more neighbors in need will get shoveled out, and we can make our cities and towns more walkable.

We propose that you organize a #Snowcrew Yeti Shoveling Party in your neighborhood.

Here's how:

Step 1: Sign up for Snowcrew.org to find out which of your neighbors in your neighborhood need assistance shoveling. If you need help shoveling, choose "Request Assistance."

Step 2: Engage your neighbors to join you by posting to your neighborhoods social network on Nextdoor.com. Be sure to suggest a time and place to meet. I also recommend you ask to see if anyone know anyone in your neighborhood needs help shoveling - see my previous post titled "Lend a hand to those who are not able to shovel." (Disclosure - I work for Nextdoor).

Step 3: Go shovel and take lots of pictures and post them to Twitter using #Snowcrew.

Step 4: Celebrate your good work and get warm by patronizing a local restaurant, pub, or coffee shop.

What to shovel:

  • Elder neighbors, neighbors with access and functional needs, injured neighbors, and those who are sick and have young children that cannot be left unattended
  • Fire hydrants
  • Curb cuts, pedestrian islands in the middle of the street, and bus stops

Tips to shovel safely:

  • Avoid heavy meals and alcohol before heading out
  • Stretch beforehand
  • Dress warmly
  • Do not work to the point of exhaustion
  • If you run out of breath, take a break
  • Drinks lots of water
  • Lift with your legs bent, not your back
  • Keep your back straight
  • Shovel slowly and shovel small scoops
  • Spray your shovel with cooking spray
  • Shovel with a neighbor or group of neighbors

Ideas to make room for more snow:

  • Pack the tops of mounds of snow down
  • Make terraces on the sides of snow mounds
  • Carry snow to places where there is room

Warmly,

Joseph Porcelli
Founder and Volunteer Organizer of #Snowcrew
Senior City Strategist, Nextdoor.com

Brendan Kearney
Communication Manager, Walk Boston

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Comments

now put my cone back in my spot

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Now, only if more old and disabled people would get computers, smart phones, and training to access twitter and web sites to get the goods and services they need! That's the challenge. They need proxies to use new media for them.

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Without the benefit of a "Senior City Strategist" or a "Communication Manager" my family, my tenant, and my neighbors managed to shovel out our street, together. Didn't even need a web site, social media, or twitter. We kinda looked out the window, saw that people we knew needed a hand, and went out with shovels and worked it out together. Who knew such a thing was even possible?

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Yeah, what a loser. His time would be better spent crapping on other people's good deeds on the internet!

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Joseph Porcelli is really trying to help others. Many seniors I know are very internet savvy. If you know someone who might need help, submit the info.

What have you done to help a stranger today?

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I know most of the people on my block, which is about as far as I've gotten in the last five days. So no, I didn't help a stranger today. I shovelled them out, and likewise them me. That's what we do where I live.

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I would count the amount of reps I would do with each arm (each shovel load of snow thrown). after about 5/10/15 reps depending on how heavy it was, I would switch to the other arm. Then I'd do the same thing again, counting each rep. If i could do 2-4 sets without getting too tired, I'd be good. Then I'd take a break and go at it again.

For some reason it took my mind off of the work, and I found the work to be easier.

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One of my New Year's resolutions was to get more resistance training in. Since I've limited means right now, it's largely been bodyweight resistance stuff: squats, pushups, planks and the like. I Cannot Believe how good technique for squats has been saving my lower back/behind.

The next round of shoveling, am going to try to incorporate your discipline, as well.

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Now it means everything hurts on both sides equally, but that's not a bad thing.

I found it to be rather like counting laps while swimming, or strokes while kayaking/rowing.

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For each of the recent storms, shoveling, roof raking, snow blowing our own spot & some of the neighbors will reliably log between 20,000 and 26,000 steps on my fitbit. This is pretty close to a daily max I got when hiking out of the freaking grand canyon.

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I thought you were doing this as a kind of non-profit effort for your "neighbors?"

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And started this work here (remember the Nametag project?). Actually he lived in JP and he probably still considers JP and dare I say it, Boston, to be his neighbors (no quotes). I'm certain he still has good friends here.

why you be so negative?

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EVERYONE IS A WISE ASS!! Maybe instead of posting immature comments maybe you should go out and help someone out. YOU WILL FEEL SOOOOOOOO GOOOD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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