Best Way to Clear the Snow Pile at the End of Your Driveway

Start with your shovel. If you have a snow blower, you shouldn’t have a problem blowing away soft, fluffy snow. But once it’s crusty and frozen, you’ll need to change tactics. Use a shovel to break the mound into smaller chunks that you can toss aside or that will fit into the snow blower’s intake more readily. This is especially important if you have an undersized snow blower, such as a single-stage gas or battery-powered machine, that doesn’t have the power to crush crusty snow on its own.

Less is more. Even if you have a beefier snow blower, take care that it doesn’t become clogged by chunking up the job. Take smaller passes at about half the width of the intake. It may take more time, but you’ll have fewer interruptions stopping to unclog the machine, and it will throw the snow you do attack faster and farther.

Plan ahead for the next storm. Homeowners who live in regions that get one snowstorm after another have developed a technique that minimizes the amount of snow a plow can shove into an open driveway. Facing the street, use a shovel or snow blower to clear a space to the left of your driveway that’s 10 feet long and at least a car width wide. That way, when the plow comes down the street, it pushes most of the snow into that area and not into your driveway.

Be kind to the plow operator. As annoying as the plow pile may be, don’t give in to the impulse to hurl the snow back into the street. According to the snow plow pros we talked to, that just prolongs the problem, causing them to make more passes to clear the road. The result? Another plow pile.