How I battle the evil leaf blowers

My suburban neighborhood has been noisier than usual this year. In addition to the ubiquitous roar of gas-powered leaf blowers, there is now the sound of me fighting back.

I’ve been a lonely scold griping to my neighbors about their obnoxious leaf blowers for years. After a beautiful spring day wrecked by hours of nonstop droning earlier this year, I decided complaining wasn’t enough. So I messaged a group of offending neighbors, telling them that every time their leaf blowers rattled my house, I would respond with a like amount of hip-hop or heavy metal blared directly at them from my 70-watt guitar amplifier. The neighbors united against me, deeming the leaf blowers essential and calling my bluff.

To stream music into a guitar amplifier, you need a small Bluetooth receiver designed for the auxiliary jack in a car, plus an adapter to fit the gizmo into the amp’s larger jack. Forty bucks, all in. Then you sync your phone or other music source to the Bluetooth receiver, place the amp in a strategic location and let ‘er rip. You could blast music at your neighbors from any speaker, but the beauty of an amp is it’s really damn loud. Plus, you can add distortion and other effects if you want a screechy or especially grating timbre that fully matches the leaf blowers’ ear-splitting uproar.

The first time I did it, I felt nervous—until I felt elated. About five minutes after my neighbor’s landscaping crew lit up their leaf blowers on a bright Tuesday morning, I put the amp on my deck, aimed it at the problem, set the amp’s volume to 5—leaving room to escalate—and hit play. Blaring hip-hop collided with leaf-blower racket in a terrible cacophony between the two houses. But after the blowers stopped, I treated my neighbors to another 20 minutes or so of carefully cultivated hip-hop thumping like a trailer for Rolling Loud. It might be unwanted noise, but now I was the one making it. Hooya.

[What are your tactics for defeating leaf blowers? Share them on Rick Newman's Twitter account with the hashtag #beatleafblowers]

I learned to anticipate when the landscaping crews typically show up at my neighbors’ homes, and be ready, with the Bluetooth receiver fully charged, extension cords prepositioned, Zoom schedule cleared. Another neighbor does his own lawn, like me, except with religious embrace of his beloved leaf blower, which he defends in arguments with me as if it’s a family member or pet. I’m a little cagier with this neighbor, sometimes deploying the guitar amp in direct combat but other times choosing a delayed response, such as playing softer music out the windows right around the family’s bedtime.