Showing posts with label aerification. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aerification. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

When It Rains, It Pours

After going on a 24 day drought we have received nearly 4 inches of rain in 4 days! Naturally the change took place during “The Heritage” as it has done in previous years. The maintenance squad is really bummed we weren’t able to put on the type of event we hoped.  We were dialed-in during Thursday’s practice rounds with every playing surface cut perfectly and greens rolling an 11 on the stimp!




The calm before the storm 

We fought through the weather over the weekend and are thankful the tournament was still played all the way out to the end! Congrats to the winners! 











Mowers were replaced by squeegees, bunker rakes, and a pump.

Monday, we vented greens to try and influence gas exchange and dry down, but more storms keep the greens completely saturated with cups full of water. Greens are extremely wet, so we are taking precautions to not sand topdress with heavy equipment or roll greens until we get some dry down.  Thanks for your cooperation and understanding while greens speed is on the slower side. Hoping to dodge a bullet to get fairways mowed on Wednesday. 





Creating airflow with venting and using a powerful blower to try and dry down #15 green.


Thursday, June 3, 2021

Maintenance Mayhem

Wow! After a 3 day holiday weekend the club was closed on Tuesday. The golf course maintenance gang went to town with a wide open golf course. Numerous important tasks were completed while taking advantage of no golfers.

The ongoing  task of Bermuda suppression was done around our greens in the zoysia collars.  This is an extremely important task to have ample time for the product to dry on the leaf before having foot traffic walk through it and walk on the green as it would harm our  bentgrass greens. For this reason, this practice is a challenge for us to do during play days so Tuesday was perfect!



Tree work was also on the hit list. We removed a pine tree next to the cart barn that was causing debris issues in the cart barn drain. A dead elm tree at the maintenance facility was removed as well. Last but not least the famous Oak tree on hole number 18 was limbed up significantly and shaped a little bit. 





Bunkers made the cut too! We are experimenting with some rubber based paint to color our black liners white so when exposed they are much easier on the eyes. The bunker behind 6 and a few bunkers at 12 green were done this time. We plan on continuing this process when time allows, but this is another hard task to get done during play days. I have been waiting on transportation of white bunker Sand to maintain proper Sand depths in bunkers. After four weeks we are supposed to receive a load this Friday, so we will be addressing bunkers very soon.





Putting greens were also vented. Once again this process helps exchange gases within the soil and promote root growth at this time before summer sets in. We followed up with a smooth roller and a light top dressing on Wednesday. Our sanding rate was a little heavier than I would’ve liked but greens will be great for the weekend.





Finally, on Tuesday we started sod prep to repair poor areas in fairways. Prep was finished on Wednesday and sod was completed today on Thursday! Please avoid driving through these areas or walking through them. They will be pretty soggy for the next week or so to get the turf rooted in.



Our landscape bed rehab at the bogey hills clock near the practice green is complete! Great work by our horticulturist, Jeny, planting a variety of plants for a new upgraded look!




Friday, April 2, 2021

Mercy!













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!!!

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Moving Forward

Hello!  Time to dust of my blogger app!  It’s turned into a really busy year and the past month has been jamming with both golf and maintenance events!

I’m going to start with a really cool video that has been going around about the golf course maintenance crews preparation for this past weeks US Open. This video really demonstrates the same thinking, planning and work we do at BHCC, just on a slightly smaller scale. Take a look! 👀 


Now back to Bogey!  We successfully completed the aerification of greens for this fall season! Technically we actually did them twice.(shhhhhh)🤔🤫 

A week ago we pulled a 1/2”core, cleaned the surface, sanded, brushed, blow excess sand, roll, water and everything else under the moon during a couple long days.  This week we snuck in a 1/2” solid deep tine at a 6” depth! The trick is that the solid tine leaves a smaller affected hole in the surface than a 1/2” hollow tine used the week previous.  The result is NO added recovery time!  Tomorrow we are fertilizing greens which will help finish closing in the holes by the end of next week hopefully.  Please note we dislike the aerification process as much as the members dislike the putting surface during the healing time.  I enjoy looking at a perfect and tight putting surface and it kills me to look at bumpy holes but we know this is the necessary process to allow us to provide premium putting greens throughout the golf season! Thanks for your patience and understanding!


Picture after pulling 1/2” core a week ago

Picture after 1/2” solid this week

We have also made a mess out of the roughs while over-seeding a fescue/bluegrass mix.  Most seeding was concentrated around greens and fairway entrances and exits.



Finally, last week we also treated fairways for Bermuda contamination for the last time this year.  With this application and the unseasonably cooler weather, fairways have really yellowed off quick.  Unfortunately that means the change over to carts on paths is looming in the near future.




Sunday, July 19, 2020

Caught Up To Speed

A quick update to get everyone up to speed.  We have been busy punching holes in our warm season surfaces.  In the past two weeks we have solid tined all of our collars, pulled a core on selective tee boxes and attempted to pull a core in fairways.  We received a surprise storm the night before the scheduled fairway aerification and decided it was too wet after starting #17 fairway.  We are looking to possibly reschedule fairway aerification for July 27th.  During this span of time we have also vented greens with needle tines and continue to do so on a biweekly basis.





We have also made applications to fairways, collars and tees for Bermuda suppression.  Current bronzing in collars are an indication of hurt Bermuda grass.





Last but not least, damaged areas in fairways and a few small spots in collars were repaired with zoysia sod.  We have a few more small areas left to complete.






Sunday, April 5, 2020

The Big One!

Have a lot of information included in this one, but the first topic I want to discuss is the one that’s most exciting! The cart ruling has changed for the season and we are now allowing carts off the path! At this time we are going with a “no restrictions” ruling which allows members to drive in both the fairways and the roughs. Please still enter at 90° to your ball and exit the fairway and rough at the blue exit stake.  We have also initiated our hole location rotation on putting greens for the season.

Last week we completed greens aerifiaction during a two day event. The event was extremely successful and the greens were left in very good shape upon completion.  Greens were left with a moderate sand top dressing layer to help with the smoothing process. We then also vertical mowed the greens on Thursday, thinning out the canopy and continuing the smoothing process. The greens are already rolling great and should be filled in within another week or so.







In other news, we have been keeping bunkers raked and started mowing areas of rough but will start mowing in its entirety this week. Fairways and tees are starting to green up but probably won’t see their first mow for another week or two. Compost has been flying into beds and flowers will be on order soon to start providing color around the property.  The area behind number eight green has received grass seed and straw. More plants will be installed this spring in the area. A lot is going on but we are rocking and rolling on the golf course.




Monday, September 16, 2019

Blazing Saddles

The golf course maintenance squad found their kryptonite today. After a long week preparing for the club championship and executing a great tournament setup, we followed up directly with aerating greens.  A late night Sunday that led into a barn burner without the feeling of having any downtime.  The extreme heat and cumulative effect of fatigue broke us today. 

We did complete aerification as scheduled but our cleanup effort lacked our typical quality.  We will buff out the details in the upcoming days.  Greens will fill in within a few short weeks and be great once again.

Thanks for your patience and understanding!










Sunday, September 15, 2019

Beauty and the Beast

The golf course was absolutely a thing of beauty this weekend for the club championship!  We delivered premium tournament playing conditions that challenged all the competitors!  Congrats to all the winners!







...but while the members were still battling for victory we brought out the beast!  Greens aeration began on the front nine late this afternoon.  The rest of the course we be completed on Monday.  More details will be held for the next blog entry so stay tuned!








Monday, August 5, 2019

Holy Moly!!!

We took full advantage of a Monday with no golf today!!!  We vented greens and used solid tines to aerate collars and fairways.  Since we did not pull any cores there is zero mess!  Disruption to golf is minimul and recovery will be very quick!

To my calculations, we punched around 12 million total holes today spread over 18.5 acres!!! Holy Moly!!!





We used our machines to vent greens and aerate collars.  The fairways were completed by a contractor who brought in 3 tractors to complete the task in about 11 hours.

We also did some tree pruning today.  We rented a scissor lift tot get to limbs as high up as 60ft!




Before and after from #17 blue and black tees.




Before and after from the left edge of #3 fairway
(limb in upper foreground was removed after photo was taken 😉)


Thursday, July 18, 2019

Eventful

After hosting the three day, Missouri Women’s Amateur Championship  we were expecting to get caught up on mowing today.  Instead we had to get creative and change plans after a surprise storm blew in Wednesday evening.  This is one of the many challenges of golf course maintenance.  We have to always be ready to change gears and come up with back up plans based on events including golf and weather.

The most important move made was to do an emergency venting of greens.   A wet soil from storms and extreme temperatures could bake our greens.  The venting will help dry the surfaces and exchange gases aiding in less stress through the next few days!



Picture below is a plug from a putting green that shows increased rooting from previous venting holes!



Storm damage from the high winds left the course littered.  We spent most of the day cleaning up downed debris.