Thursday, November 22, 2012

Project Wrap-Up

It looks like the great stretch of weather will come to a end this week with highs forecasted to be in the 30's. Saturday the 24th will be the last day for play and we hope to apply a heavy application of sand to the greens next week.

We are glad many of you were able to enjoy the nice days November offered and take advantage of our free round for Veterans. Looking back I think November was nicer than October when considering the number of warm days.

The weather also allowed us to work on a couple projects to give us a head start next spring. The newly designed tee complex was dormant seeded and covered with straw to keep the seed in place until spring. A dormant seeding is when the seed is applied but not expected to germinate until next year. The benefit is the seed is down and ready to emerge long before we could work on the the wet ground next spring.

As a reminder we changed this tee complex for two main reasons. First the tee was unlevel and as a huge "runway tee" would be difficult to strip and level to customer expectations. Secondly this tee was left over from the old course before expansion to 27 holes so the tee lined up with a fairway that no longer exists. The tee encouraged players to hit the ball onto the 9th fairway more than the 10th.

The new 10th tee complex shifted the tees right and lined them up with the fairway. The silver and white tees are a bit shorter while the blue and black are the same length.
The chipping green project is also moving along well with the weather and hard work by the staff. The new addition should open mid to late summer next year with a sand bunker and many areas to practice your short game from. The area had to be elevated due to construction debris being buried under the site and mounding was added for aesthetics and safety.

The dirt for the mounding came from the nearby 10th tee project along with thousands of yards donated by Baumhardt Sand and Gravel as they were working down the street and it saved them money to give us the material rather than haul it away.
Trenching drain lines in the chipping green. 1" of pea gravel goes in the bottom followed by the perforated tile and then the trench is filled with pea gravel. (sometimes pictures from my phone will not stay upright so you need to tilt your head.)


Carefully spreading a 3" layer of washed pea stone on the green base while not driving on or catching the soil below.
Building a green takes a lot of steps, first the base is graded to the specified slopes, leaving a 12" lip of soil around the green. At this point the green looks like a pond or swimming pool and really confused some of the customers. Irrigation is put in around the green and drainage tile is put at the bottom of the green.

The lip of the green disappears when 3" of pea stone is laid on the base followed by 9" of sand/peatmoss mix called greensmix. In our case the greensmix will be installed in winter to allow the surrounds to freeze to reduce damage from the trucks.

But the best part of the warm November days is we were able to grade and seed the mounding around the green and then covered it with straw blanket to prevent erosion. This site was just under a acre and the small staff earned it's wages working hard to get it all done in one day.

In spring the greensmix will be graded and seeded and the bunker will be finished and filled with sand.

The new chipping green site with the surrounds covered with seed and straw. The sand bunker is
barely visible on the bottom left.
The final project for this fall is a redo of the red and silver tee on hole 17. The old tee was small and unlevel but also had large tree roots from the nearby pines poking out causing a unsafe condition. The new tee has been shaped and topsoil added. We will allow it to settle over winter and seed it in the spring.

To all our customers thank you for your business and feedback and enjoy your winter.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Project Time

Each fall we try to finish one big project based on customer comments, feedback and what is good for the golf course. I can tell you now next year will be a redo of 27 green. We plan to strip the sod off the back half and lower the huge mound to create more cupping area and with luck and good weather put the sod back. We will also add some smaller mounds and new trees to separate the green from the clubhouse and driveway. The redo of 27 was not done this year because the WSGA (Wisconsin State Golf Association) asked us not to due to the State Best Ball being played at Rolling Meadows next spring.

But this year we started with a goal to build a chipping green near the putting green to give customers a great option for practicing their short game. The area needed to be raised and have some mounds around it so we secured a large amount of free fill for the project from a building addition down the road. Unfortunately the free clay fill turned out to be mainly concrete and blacktop so we had to turn it down.

The chipping green site right of the putting green.
Our second option for the needed material was to re-construct the nearby 10th tee as per the master plan drawn in 1993 but not done during the expansion to 27 holes. The project takes the old "runway" type tee and separates it into 4 tees while moving it right to line up with the fairway. The original tee was leftover from the old course and was set up to cause golfers to hit into the 9th fairway because the original first hole played up the current 9th hole and ended near the current 2nd fairway. We choose the 10th tee because it was close, had the extra material we needed, was un-level and one of four tees not redone during the expansion to 27 holes or since then. (5, 19, 24, 25 are the others)

The new tees line up with the hole the way it was designed.
 The 10th tee project will give us enough material to start the chipping green project but will probably not have enough for the mounding. We did hire a bulldozer to shape the tees and green but the rest of the work is done in house.

The staff removing excess soil from 10 tee to take to the chipping green.
The building of a quality chipping green will require a lot of in-house work. First the base of the green is built to match the final grade which in this case the green will have 2' of slope from back to front. Then a 7" lip of clay/soil mix will be built around the green followed by 3" of topsoil. The green will then look like a 10" pond. Drainage will be installed in the green and through the sand bunker. Then irrigation will be installed on the outside of the green. The 10" "pond" or green-site will be filled with a 2" layer of clear pea stone and a 8" layer sand/peatmoss mix.

It is our goal to get the tee and tee surrounds and green surrounds built and dormant-seeded this fall and covered with straw blanket and seed the green in the spring. All of this is weather dependent of course. Under normal conditions the areas should be open in mid summer.

We also hope to construct a new red/silver tee on hole 17 to replace the current tee that is too small and is having problems with root encroachment under the tee causing a dangerous situation if the tee markers are placed in the wrong place.

This weekends rain will slow the project down a couple days but was very needed to settle the tees and green-site along with filling the ponds and marshes. This was the first time in 16 years the marsh on holes 13/14 were empty so we could mow them.

Feel free to contact us with any suggestions you have for future projects we can consider. Items on our list of possible projects include.
  • Drain hole 9 pond and bring the bank back to the original design.
  • Level the back of 27 green. (Scheduled for 2013)
  • Re-build 19 tee to master plan.
  • Ease the approach to 25 green or enlarge 25 green.
  • Re-build 7 fairway to allow for easier second shots over the marsh.

Saturday, September 15, 2012

What happened to my lawn?

If you lawn is like mine it may be looking thin, weedy and full of crab and quack grass!  With a few steps you should be able to bring the turf around to have a healthy weedfree lawn for next summer.

Thin or bare areas - When the rain started after the drought most areas that are going to fill in with desirable grasses have by now or they are not going to. However depending on here you live and how much rain you had it is probable those areas died rather than just going dormant. Right now we are in a mini-drought with un-irrigated areas going dormant again but it looks as though rain is on the way.

The next couple weeks would be a great time to rake those areas with a steel rake and spread some seed. If possible lightly rake back and forth to work the seed into and past the dead material, pack down or cover with a light layer of soil as a topdressing and then pack. If it is only a couple patches covering with burlap or straw until the grass is up will help hold the moisture in to allow faster seed germination.

Even weedy areas can be seeded now and the weeds can be taken care of later in fall.

The best sunny lawn mix will have 80% kentucky bluegrass and 20% perennial ryegrass in it or up to 20% fine fescue. 100% kentucky bluegrass will work but it does take longer to germinate and emerge so the perenial rye is used as a nurse crop to help stabilize the soil and provide shade for the new bluegrass plants. For shady areas your mix should have more than 50% fine fescue in it with kentucky bluegrass and not more than 15% ryegrass. (Examples of fine fescue are creeping red, chewings and hard fescue.)

Beware of discount seed mixes that contain some or all annual ryegrass or rough bluegrass. Annual ryegrass will die over winter and rough bluegrass is not a desirable lawn mix. A perfect mix for the average lawn would be 60% kentucky blue, 30% fine fescue and 20% perennial ryegrass. This will allow the bluegrass to thrive in most of the lawn but the fescues to thrive in those few shady sites.

Weeds - During the drought weeds of all sorts took advantage of the dormant thin turf and are trying to take over. To control dandelion, clover, creeping charlie, creeping jenny, nut sedge and other perennial weeds wait until after a frost or two when the plants are weaker for better control. Even then creeping charlie may have to re-treated next spring when it starts growing again. A quality three way selective-herbicide from a reputable source will take care of the weeds. Spraying weeds is more effective than using a granular product but both should work when  used according to the label and directions.

Crabgrass usually comes up in late June and early July and looks light green in color and grows laterally or nearly flat on the ground. Right now it is seeding out with spiny looking stems and seed heads. Because it is a annual it will die during the first hard frost but the seeds it produces will be there next spring waiting to germinate. The best way to treat crabgrass at this point is to remember where it came up and treat those areas with a pre-emergent weed control next spring following the directions and rates on the label.

Quackgrass is a perennial and never goes away and can only be eliminated by using a non-selective-herbicide like roundup and killing everything and starting over. Quackgrass like many weeds is a plant of opportunity filling in thin areas of your lawn. The best treatment is to have a healthy bluegrass lawn to crowd out the quack. In years of normal rain it should be a minimal problem for quality lawns. The plants there today will live for years but a pre-emergent herbicide next spring should keep more plants from establishing from seed.

Fertilizer - September is a great time to fertilize your lawn while it is actively growing to prepare it for winter and next summer. Recent research has shown that a late fall fertilization is not as effective as once thought because it is not taken up by the plant. The amount and type of fertilizer needed really depends on your unique lawn so visit a vendor you trust and ask for a recommendation.

Fertilizer is sold as a 10-10-10 or 18-5-9 etc. The most important number is the first one or the amount of Nitrogen or "N". In a 18-5-9 fertilizer there would be 18lbs of nitrogen in 100lbs of product not the bag you purchase. Nitrogen comes in two forms: WIN or water insoluble nitrogen and WSN water soluble fertilizer. Water soluble fertilizer is normally considered quick release and will only last 3 to 4 weeks. WSN should make up 20 to 50% of the total nitrogen

The second number is for phosphorus or "P" and in most cases will be 0 due to state regulations and the fact most Wisconsin soils have enough phosphorus in them. For the golf course we take soil tests to check the amount of phosphorus and by law that is the only way we can apply it.

The third number is for potassium or "K" and is very important for plant health during stressfull times. In established lawns not much is needed but only a soil test can tell for sure.

Irrigation - Healthy lawns normally can thrive on just rain but in a year like this some supplemental irrigation may be needed for recovery or in future years to keep grass alive during long droughts. For established lawns and trees it is best to water heavy once a week to ten days rather than light every couple days. For this fall unless we get a above average amount of rain it would be a great time to water your established trees deeply. Let a slow running hose soak the area or use a soaker hose for a couple hours per tree to allow the water to penetrate deeply.

A healthy lawn brightens a homes landscape and increases home value. Yours may have taken a beating this summer but with a little time and work can be looking great by next spring.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Where are the divot boxes?

You may have noticed we picked up the Divot Boxes on the tees this week and yes it is a little earlier than normal. In past years we have waited until late September to do so with the hopes that customers would use them. Hopefully you noticed because you went to fill a divot and the box was not there but I fear it is because you went to sit on the box or throw your garbage in it!

Well the hope is over. I have watched the tees with divot boxes closely this year and it did not matter if we had daily play, juniors, seniors, member tournaments or even a WSGA Tournament less than 10% of the divots on a par 3 were filled. Often I would have 3 or 4 filled divots spaced between 40 to 50 empty holes. How can a member of the club take a gully like that and then not fill the divot when the box is right there?

After 7 years of investing in nice divot boxes and all the thanks in the world to the customers who use them religiously do we really need them out there? For now they are just gone for fall as our staff shrinks by over half this week and we do not need to invest important labor hours in moving the unused divot boxes ever time we move the markers. We are considering not even putting them out next year and just reinvesting the time we spend moving the boxes is more important jobs. I hate to let the golfers off the hook but right now we spend teams of divot fillers out every 10 days or so to fill all the par 3 and heavy use par 4 tee boxes anyway.

Again we appreciate all of you who do fill divots and the bottles will still be available on the carts so you can do so. I also appreciate all the people who fix their ball marks but if every person who told me they fix three or four per green actually did, we would not have any left. But that is a story for a different day .....

In this picture taken after a high profile event with local players
only 4 of more than 45 divots were filled. (I couldn't capture all 45 divots in the camera)
And it looks like one person filled the three because they are right next to each other.

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Heat and Drought end with Wind and Rain


Wow, I has been over a month since I last posted but in reality not much had changed until now. Dry dry dry was the normal condition for the golf course. We went 41 days with only .4" of rain here on the south side of Fond du Lac with rain all around us. That ended early Thursday July 26th when we received 2.4" followed by .4" that afternoon and another shower Friday morning.
The rain was welcome as all of our ponds were down and the inefficiency of the irrigation system could really be seen with as many wet areas as dry areas. We had invested/wasted countless man hours in dragging hoses and hand watering over the past 2 months to keep key areas alive if not green.

Most un-irrigated places on the golf course are just dormant and will quickly green up although there are some areas that are dead and will need reseeding. We use a infrared thermometer to monitor surface temperatures of the turf to help gauge what time to syringe the turf with a mist of water to cool it down on hot days.

It is tough to grow grass when the surface temperature is 126!
This was taken in the rough on hole 12.

Cart traffic during the drought no doubt made things worse as what would normally be a slight wear areas became paths of dead turf. Also green turf that is under heat / moisture stress is susceptible to damage from cart traffic. The picture above shows a fairway that had traffic at just the wrong time and how the turf is damaged by the may wheels that go over it each day.


Cart traffic has a negative impact on turf under heat / moisture stress in the afternoon.
The negative of the rain is the fairways are a bit wet in places after weeks of watering tends to over-water some spots in a effort to get enough water to other places to keep them alive.  But the sunshine should bring things back to normal quickly this weekend. The real negative is the storm brought a lot of wind damage to the trees on the course. The airport recorded a 70 MPH gust early in the morning and I believe it given the damage we have seen.

In total we have 7 trees down completely and another 10 that are damaged to the point of being dangerous and they will need to come down. With the recent burn ban we have not been able to burn our burn pile so it is full from a summer of tree trimming. To accommodate the large number of downed limbs and trees we started a few temporary piles on the golf course to stockpile the wood until we can rent a chipper and mulch them up. This will be done quickly before the brush piles can kill the turf underneath.

Using multiple piles allowed us the opportunity to clean up more debris from the playing surface because it saved travel time to a single central location. We appreciate your patience during this time.

The Tent Was a Mess With Tables and Chairs Everywhere.
This damage near 23 tee was typical of what we saw throughout the course.
More of the same between hole 18 and 19


Many dangereous and hanging branches were removed.








Friday, June 15, 2012

Irrigation Time

With the dry weather the irrigation system has been getting a workout! It seems no matter how much we test the heads, controllers and pumpstation problems creep up through the season. The system waters about 60 acres of the 240 we have at Rolling Meadows with irrigation in greens, tees and fairways.  The pumpstation can pump over 1400 gallons a minute to feed the miles of pipe and over 500 irrigation heads.

The pumpstation pumps from the main irrigation pond that is fed by runoff from the upper half of the golf course in addition to a high capacity well. The pumpstation maintain a pressure of 90 pounds per square inch in the system. Green heads are spaced in a square pattern and put out 30 to 40 gallons per minute 55' to 85' feet. The big heads in the fairway throw 60 gallons per minute up to 98'.

This week we had a faulty sensor four feet under the water in the pumphouse that would tell the pumpstation it was out of water so the pumps would stop running. In the morning we would see the error and assume we ran out of water and the 2 foot inlet filter was clogged. However we could not recreate this problem during the day no matter how much water we pumped. After three nights of a total system failure and watering 10-15% of the course we figured out we did not have a water flow problem but a faulty sensor. It was a quick fix but something you do not expect.

Because of that you may of noticed the challenge we have greening the turf areas back up after they brown due to our heavy soils. They hold moisture well but when they get dry and turn brown or dormant they stay that way for days no matter how much water we apply. Although we have caught up on our application rates the areas still look off color and will for the next few days until they slowly come back. This is different than the courses I have worked at previously with normal or rocky soils. At those facilities areas would be wilted grey and brown in the afternoon and a little water would turn them emerald green the following morning.



With over 500 irrigation heads one or two of them break every time we water either through wear and age along with partially clogged nozzles that change distribution. We spend the first few hours each morning trying to find those broken heads and improving coverage.

Often golfers ask why if we have a automatic system we still have sprinklers on at 7 AM. Early morning is the best time to water for plant health and to reduce fungus and disease problems so we start the system as late as we can but we can only water so many heads at a time without pressure and performance loss. So we water the early holes (1-5, 10-14 and 19-22) early in the morning and the later or finishing holes around dawn.

The worst time for us or you to water is in the mid to late afternoon. The grass does not like to be wet during the heat of the day and a lot of the water evaporates before it hits the ground.

How do we decide when and how much to water? We use information from our weather station and a e-mail service from UW-Madison to determine our Evapotranspiration Rate (ET Rate). The ET is a combination of how much water a the grass plants would use in a day plus the amount of water evaporated into the atmosphere. The ET rate is calculated by temperature, sunshine, wind, humidity and dew point. Believe it or not the rate is usually higher in June than it is the hot dog days of August because the humidity is lower in June.

So far in the month of June our ET has averaged an amazing .23" or almost a quarter inch a day of water use or evaporation with peak days of .34". University research has shown that plants are healthiest if we replace 80% of the ET. .23' x 80% equals .18" of water a day we need to apply for healthy turf.  Under normal circumstances we try to water ever second or third day so we try to apply .36" or .54' of water per application.

No matter how new or technologically advanced a irrigation system is they do not replace rain and in Wisconsin they are designed only to supplement rain. Long term dry periods lead to wet spots from too much water and dry spots from too little water. We do our best to find these areas and increase or decrease coverage but our biggest problem is right around the heads or right in the center of the fairway where extra water is spilt when the heads turn on and off and with the single row spacing the area is hit by three heads.

Perfect green is not our goal with irrigation. Our goal is healthy but playable turf and dry and a little brown is better than wet and bright green.

Friday, June 8, 2012

Greens aerification

This weeks players may have noticed we poked pencil thin holes in the greens to allow air and water to penetrate the soil profile and loosen the soil underground. Although this process does lead to a couple days of less than perfect putting the holes are almost invisible 5 days later.

I realize the greens had been near perfect the past three weeks but with the long spring and upcoming hot humid weather it was a perfect time to give the greens a break. Also the greens are good for three weeks at a time because of the verticutting, aerification, spiking and topdressing we do to them every 3 to 4 weeks.

It would be great to have perfect conditions all the time but greens are a living thing and need to be fed, groomed and protected just like your body does. Fast and firm and tightly mowed is great for periods of time but maintenance has to be done also.

At the same time we applied a light layer of sand topdressing and a granular fertilizer because we knew we would not mow greens for a couple days after the sand was applied. The challenge for us is working the sand into the tight turf so we do not pick it up with our mowers reducing the effectiveness and damaging the mowers.

As I discussed last time the sand has many purposes.
  1. It smooths the surface by filling in little holes and marks to allow for smoother puts.
  2. It reduces the thatch layer that can make the greens soft and bumpy by diluting the dead roots and shoots and rhizomes the bentgrass greens produce.
  3. Protects the crown or growing point of the bentgrass plant by slightly buring it.
The greens were mowed, aerified, mowed, rolled, mowed again, rolled again, topdressed, fertilized and watered. The next two days they were only rolled and on the fourth day they were mowed. That fourth day we get some sand but by the 5th day we only get a little sand and the greens are nearly back up to speed.

The challenge of the process is the wet sand and fertilizer sticks to the ball when players putt in the morning dew. Also the sand tracks on shoes and drops off in uneven piles to cause small bumps until we roll or mow again.

Believe me when I say we only do the maintenance that is for the best of the golf course and if we could skip the work we sure would. Thanks again for your patience as we maintain the playing surfaces you love and for the next three weeks, putting should be near perfect!

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Verticutting Greens

You may have noticed we verticut and sanded the greens last week to remove organic matter. This process is similar to thatching your home lawn and is needed to thin and smooth the putting greens by removing thatch. By topdressing right after the sand helps dillute more thatch and fill small depressions from ball marks, footprints and other surface imperfections.

Thatch is a layer of dead and living roots, shoots and leaf blades right below the surface. To much thatch will cause bumpy and soft surfaces that do not receive balls well and impede water penetration.

It is a time consuming process with many steps.
  1. Mow the green with good reels.
  2. Verticut with thatching reels while collecting the organic matter and dumping it into a waiting cart. The mower baskets are emptied every other pass or they overflow with material.
  3. Loose material is blown off the greens.
  4. Mow the greens twice to remove more loose material and cut straggler blades off.
  5. Apply a light layer of sand.
  6. Roll the green with vibratory rollers to mover the sand material into the green.
  7. Water and wait for healing.

A freshly verticut and blown green. The green is then cut twice before sand is applied.

A muddy Cushman cart full of organic material removed from only two greens.

Although the lines in the green are visible for a few weeks ball roll is only affected for a day or two and greens are smoother and faster immediatly after sanding. The downfall is the sand is sticky in the morning for the first few days so it sticks to balls until the dew burns off.

You may remember we used to verticut 9 holes three Mondays in a row but found that interfered with putting for three weeks so now we verticut all three 9's in one day to increase course quality for all players. 

Although it seems we preform these agronomic practices just as the greens reach perfection, these projects are why they reach perfection! Thank you for your support.

Monday, April 23, 2012

Culvert Collapse

You may have noticed the gaping hole in the cart path on hole 1 for the first half of the season. At some point the 24" x 20' plastic culvert collapsed allowing the soil to fall in and wash down stream. Luckily the sink-hole was to the one side so golfers and carts could still gain access to the first fairway.

Oddly enough a 3" irrigation line crossed right over collapsed part of the culvert so our opinion is the irrigation crew damaged the pipe during installation and covered up the incident. That lasted 17 years until the area collapsed. Luckily it was over winter and not while a customer or employee was crossing the creek.

One challenge to the job was to stop the water flow so we could install the new culvert. We did this by building a dam upstream and pump downstream to provide as dry as workplace as possible.

It took three of us a full day to remove the old culvert, prep the area and install the new culvert. We have no doubt the new culvert will last 50 years of more without issue.

As you play the hole you may notice the creek is holding water. We did change the grade to get the new culvert under the irrigation pipe and after things firm up we will need to work downstream to improve water flow and clean out debris.


In case you have not noticed there is always work to do on the golf course!

Almost Showroom New

Each off-season we pick one special project that might not need to be done but could be done to make something work better or look better. This year we choose to paint a classic golf course tractor, our 1972 Jacobsen G-10.


The G-10 has a three point lift, belt drive PTO and 3 speeds. This tractor will never pull a plow but is a great unit for pulling trailers or a gang reel mower through the rough. Comfortable to drive the G-10's gasoline engine is quite for a 50HP power unit.

The decals were no longer available from the manufacture but we had some custom made by the Graphic Center in Fond du Lac at a great price.

The finished unit looks great thanks to James hard work and efforts to bring back that showroom shine.

Monday, April 2, 2012

Don't throw that tank away!

We have purchased a new sprayer for the golf course.  The old one was from 1997 and served us well with only a few parts and a new pump every few years.  Now what to do with the old one?  Some of the parts we took off to save for when we need them and others were taken to the scrapyard for a few bucks in the brat fund.

The 200 gallon tank was plastic so it could not be scrapped for metal but it was in good condition.  We decided to make it into the water tank for trees and flowers.  After we removed most of the parts we mounted it to a homemade skid so it would sit in the back of a cushman truckster without taking the box off.  Then a simple length of 1 1/4" hose with a valve at the end and off we went.

It worked great for planting last weeks trees and much faster then the old 35 gallon drum we had.  By using the skid we elevated the outlet to increase the gravitational push on the water so we can apply a large amount of water in a hurry if we want.

The tank should last 15 years until it is time for the next sprayer and we can do the job over again.

Shown is the 200 gallon water tank next to a new Cherry Tree.

Friday, March 30, 2012

Tree Planting

Stuarts Nursery in Fond du Lac had a stock reduction sale to sell their 2.5" and above nursery stock with great trees for only $90.   Considering these trees often cost $250 to $320 this was too good to pass up and we purchased a variety of oak, maple, cherry, beech, ironwood and coffeetree's for the golf course.

46% of our trees are ash and will expected to die in the next 10 years both due to age and the emerald ash borer, so it is important we keep planting trees.  Our goal is not to have tree lines fairways as that is not the type of course we have but to use trees as back drops and to provide definition to holes.

We took delivery of 16 nice specimens and planted them behind the greens on holes 5,7,8 and 20 to make up for ash and maples that in decline.  The current trees are too close to the greens causing problems with airflow, shade and roots encroaching under the green.  So although these trees are not close to the green they will be visually appealing for years to come.  Other trees were placed right of hole 8 to replace three pines that died and one oak left of 22 fairway to separate it from hole 16.  The last tree is a cherry and will be planted near the clubhouse area for aesthetics. 

On the subject of trees we have quite a few of memorial trees throughout the golf course and a plaque in the clubhouse stating the person the tree is for, the year, the type and location of the tree.


Mike Nelson steadies the tree while it is being backfilled.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

What a stretch of weather!!!!

We must thank Mother Nature for this just incredible stretch of weather that not only took us from snow to open in 5 days but has provided some of the best March turf conditions ever.  The crazy thing is not only are the days summerlike the nights are summer like with lows in the mid 50's or higher.  Greens are being mowed daily while we are nearing summer schedule on tees and fairways. 

We have not mowed rough yet but just like your lawns it is time.  The bad thing is once we start mowing it encourages growth so the more we need to mow, the same will happen at home so get that lawnmower tuned up.

Trees are starting to bud and should be hardy through any cold snaps but if you have fruit trees you really need to hope for some cooler nights to slow the process.  If it freezes after they go to far you will lose your crop for the year.

Due to the early opening we are going the first few weeks with the tees open but no tee markers allowing players to tee off wherever they want.  The golfers seem to enjoy it and the staff mowing tees do not mind not having to pick up 90 rocks per 9 holes.

If you have played the front 9 you may have noticed the sink hole on the path between hole 1 white and silver tee.  We will not know how or why until we dig it up but the 24" plastic culvert but it seems to have been crushed and moved underground by some force of nature.  The new pipe is ordered and will be here next week. 

Enjoy your time out on the course during these bonus days!

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Not open yet, but soon.

Wow what an amazing change in the weather!  We were able to open the driving range on Friday March 9th and will open 18 holes on the golf course on Tuesday March 12th.  Last weeks 8" snow melted fast but left the ground pretty soft and then Thursday night the low was 22 and Friday never got over 34 so that slowed our progress and prevented a weekend opening.

I took a long walk on the course Saturday and while the turf is still quite dormant everything looks healthy with little damage from ice, voles or snow molds.  The ground was still frozen solid in most places from Fridays cold temps but is thawed now.  We do have quite a bit of snow between hole 5 and 6 and 7 and 8 while 15 green has at least 10" on the left half.

You can see only the front right corner is clear of snow.  I expect that to be gone by the end of this week.

We will be walking only on Tuesday but without rain we should be able to allow carts soon.  We are going to start without formal tee markers and just have a sign asking players to tee off wherever they want for the first few days.

I hope to see you on the links!

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

When will we open?

This is a common question I hear every year from customers and co-workers when the days get longer and the snow starts to melt but even more so this year with the very mild weather we are having.  I can pretend and give a great answer based on science, weather facts etc etc but the truth is I have no idea.  Yep! That's right I really have no idea this far out when we might open.

I assume it will be earlier rather than later because it has been a mild winter with little snow to melt or frost in the ground but weather patterns can change overnight and a cold spell or a heavy snow will change everything. 

I really would need to know the high and low temperatures and amount of sunshine we will have for the next few weeks in order to give any kind of educated guess on when we could open.  Given the weather forecasters have trouble forecasting later today it is unlikely they can forecast the next three weeks.

I will say what is most important to thawing the soil, melting the snow and getting the course firmed up for play is the low temperature and sunshine.  Sure 50 degree afternoons help but if we can go a couple nights without freezing so the thaw extends 24 hours we make greater progress than with warm days and cold nights.

I can say as of today (Feb 21) all it will take is 4 or 5 days of good weather to get ready to go.  But the forecast is not looking like that is going to happen at least in the next ten days.

Due in part to the heavy soils we have and to avoid any potential damage or footprinting on the soft greens we open the course the first possible day after the frost leaves the top foot of soil through most of the golf course.

This is a change from just a few years ago when most courses waited for the ground to firm up, then they would mow greens, tees and fairways one or two times over a three or five day period to encourage growth and some greening of the plants. During that time they would put out all the newly painted benches, tee markers, ball washers and hazard stakes.

Now the first day we can change 9 cups and roll or mow 9 greens without damage we are open for play.  Benches, ballwashers and other features can wait until the paths firm up and we can travel the course without damage.  Those first couple rounds of the year the golfers do not seem to mind the lack of features.

So if you are dreaming of hitting the links in March, pray for sunny days and warm nights and before you know it your dreams will come true!

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Winter finally shows itself

After a mild December and early January that saw many rounds played at surrounding golf courses winter is here with snow and below zero lows.  Fortunately we had some snow before the extreme cold to protect some of the poa annua plants that came out of dormancy after being fooled into thinking it was spring.

Although some of our neighboring courses were able to open our 4th and 15th greens were completely covered by snow the entire time and with the frozen ground the cups were full of ice.  As all warm spells this one came to a end and now thoughts can turn from golf to ice fishing again.  The benefit of a late winter will be a short winter as the lengthening days will soon (hopefully) bring warmer temperatures.

With the now frozen soil we are having Bill and Wayne's Tree Service come in to trim up the oak trees on hole 7 and the famous single oak in the 9th fairway.  At the same time they will prune the tree for health and remove any deadwood in the canopy.  By pruning the lower branches it will allow a few more shots to escape under the trees.

Reel grinding is a major part of winter service.  In order to achieve the low heights golf course fairways, tees and greens are mowed at, reel mowers are used to provide a consistent surface.  Reel mowers require more winter maintenance but less in-season service when they cut cleanly for months between without grinding.

We grind all tee, green and fairway reels every year while checking bearings, seals, rollers for proper operation each year we pick one of the three and totally rebuild the reels.  With three types by doing one set a year it means every third year every reel is completely rebuilt.  The reels and frames are stripped down of all parts, washed, painted and rebuilt with new bearings and seals.  Then they are precision ground with our Foley reel grinder.  First we spin grind to true the reel and remove any cone shape that naturally occurs from use followed by relief grinding that puts a angle on the blade to allow it to go the entire season without re-grinding.  This year we are rebuilding the 20 fairway mower reels. (4 mowers with 5 reels each).

Freshly painted reels, frames, and shields awaiting re-assembly

A reel ready for grinding in the Foley Grinder.  The
bedknive grinder can be seen in the background.

While James works on the reels my job is the equipment.  Winter service means more than just oil changes as our goal is to inspect the equipment and find potential future problems or fix nagging issues from the  past season.  Mowers are just like cars with engines, differentials, transmissions, brakes and controls.  Our hoist allows us to get underneath the equipment and see what we are doing much easier.  As the equipment has gotten more advanced over the years work on axles, frames, electronics and hydraulic systems would be near impossible from the ground.

A 1997 Cushman utility cart on the hoist while the
2001 and 1989 await their turn.

We took the opprotunity of a rebate from Focus on Energy to replace the lighting in the maintenance building where we replaced 20 year old T-12 flourescent fixtures with T-8 technology.  The new lights provide a brighter whiter light while using 35 to 40% less electricity. 

New bulbs and fixtures provide for better lighting and lower costs.

Monday, January 2, 2012

What do we do in winter?

The easy answer to the common question "what do you do in the winter" is long lunches and card games but nothing is further from the truth.  It takes quite a bit of time and work to prepare the course for winter and bring in the golf course equipment.  Then the equipment and building maintenance work begins.
The first step is renting a hot water pressure washer and thoroughly clean the grime, grass and grease off the outside, inside and underbody of the mowers.  The shields are removed to allow access to all the nooks and crannies.  Then we remove the reels off of the reel mowers and store everything for easy access.

James grinds the 50+ reels we have by disassembling them, installing new bedknives and using the reel and bedknive grinders to provide a long lasting cutting surface.   Each year we grind all the reels while completely disassembling and rebuilding 1/3 of the reels with new bearings, seals, bushings while painting the frames and housings.

My work includes changing oil and fluids, filters as needed, repacking axle bearings, checking electrical connections, brakes, bearings, clutches, blades, cables, safety switches and hydraulic lines.  Golf course equipment takes a beating from working in wet conditions so often so preventative maintenance is key to making it through the season.

The hustle of the golf season makes it difficult  to use any vacation so we take some much deserved time off in December and work a normal a 40 hour week the rest of the winter unless we have to plow on a weekend.

Winter is a great time to catch up on a education and we sit in on a couple opportunities through the Wisconsin Turfgrass Association or Wisconsin Golf Course Superintendents Association.\

If you ever want to see hands on what we do feel free to stop in and say hi.  Our normal winter hours are 6:00 to 2:30.