There is thick, overgrown weeds and brushWe've trimmed most of it downRoundup is expensive to kill everything and time consuming to spray(yard is .6 acres) Do we really have to buy a bunch of screened topsoil for great grassWe don't have a TON of extra money because of downpayments, etcWe live in WMIAny resonable landscapers with advice or a reasonable plan?
Really, it just tells you the magnet was able to defy gravitySo it exerts more force on the junk than gravity does, which isn't very hard to achieve.
1The tip of the magnet might be interested in any location on the nonmagnetized barBut the end of the nonmagnetized bar will simplest suppose a robust pull to the ends of the magnet, not to the center2The powerful magnet's subject overcomes that of the weak magnet and temporarily magnetizes it simply as it does a nonmagnetized steel barThreeThe magnetic field is created when extra of the atoms are aligned in a given direction than now notWhen you drop it, they shake round and tend to realign themselves to cut back the complete magnetic discipline.
A few years back we added on to our house and ended up with a back yard that was pure clay, since the back hoe had scraped up all the top soil and buried it under clayI went to our local grain elevator and bought 2 big plastic buckets of fertilizer that is used to grow corn in fieldsI brought empty drywall mud buckets with me to fillThey didn't charge me much for the fertilizerI hand spread it all over the back lot in the Fall, and near the end of February, when the last snow was starting to melt I went out and threw handfulls of blue grass seed into the snow and it melted down into the groundThat Spring we had the most luxerious lawn in townAnd for a number of years afterwards.