A look around the golf course would make you think it’s been a productive week or two... greens successfully aerated, bunkers getting raked, started mowing roughs, grinding stumps, back filled and sodded, #14 trench sodded, compost spread in landscape beds, etc. But the truth is we or maybe just me is extremely frustrated.
This time of year is crucial for a laundry list of important chemical applications. Granular crabgrass control treating 80 acres of roughs, chickweed, henbit and clover broadleaf control in roughs, preventative large patch control treating 17 acres of zoysia surfaces, granular fertilizer on greens to help heal from aerification, poa seed head suppression application and spring preventative disease control on greens too! All of these applications need to get done within a 7-14 day window and all have the same restrictions. THE WIND!!!! We need wind speeds of no more than 5mph to do granular fertilizer on greens and less than 10mph for all other applications. It’s been either too wet or too windy for 2 weeks straight. We have started and stopped applications multiple times this week, trying desperately to sneak in a greens fertilizer in the morning before the wind picks up. Over a four day period we have completed 12 of our 19 greens. We hope to finish the last 7 on Monday. 🤦🏻♂️
If you have read this far it probably appears this is more of a rant than an exciting blog, and I suppose you are correct. 😂 But geeeez, just another example of how challenging golf course maintenance is being at the MERCY of Mother Nature at all times. When things get dicey or not executed perfectly I use a term with my crew, “it will buff out”. Growing up around cars it’s my go to, and I guess I can apply it to this situation. We will be fine, we will adapt and overcome, it will buff out. Thanks for all the support, it’s great seeing everyone back out on the golf course!!!