Friday, February 15, 2013

Snow Removal


January gave us snow, rain, thunderstorms, seasonably warm and brutally cold weather.  Toward the end of the month ice started to build up on Ridgeway's putting surfaces leaving anywhere from no ice to 1/2" covering the playing surfaces.  However, since the end of January we have had more rain, snow, warm and cold weather.  This has added to the thickness of our ice to 3" in some areas. Earlier this week we made the decision to remove snow from our putting surfaces to minimize ice buildup. This will allow what ice that is currently there to melt much quicker once it starts to warm-up.  It’s hard to imagine but spring is just around the corner. . .

Some of you may ask, "What damage has the ice caused to the greens?"  Answer: Little if any at this point because the ice cover has not been present long enough. The snow removal was done to stop or slow the buildup of more ice making it easier to melt off completely.  2012 saw a large influx in the amount of bentgrass and that will help greatly. Bentgrass is a heartier turf than Poa annua and can withstand winter conditions better with little worry of any damage.  This is why our management strategy has been to promote bentgrass so that we can rely on good hearty turf from the start of the golf year right to the end!

We look forward to an early spring in 2013. Cheers!

Monday, November 19, 2012

Course Closure

Ridgeway Country Club will be closing for carts this Wednesday November 21st and open for the last day to walking only on Thanksgiving November 22nd.   Friday and Saturday of this week look colder, with a big cold front with possible snow on Wednesday of next week.
In order to prepare the course for winter we still need to deep tine, spray for snow mold diseases and topdress the putting surfaces with sand.  We do these procedures once the course has closed for the season.  If all goes well it takes about 4-5 days to complete.  Deep-tining at the end of the season is done to keep excess water from sitting on top of the putting surfaces over winter, the side benefit is aerating the greens down 10-12” which allows for deeper roots and relief of compaction in spring.  After deep-tining we put a light to moderate amount of topdressing sand to protect the crown from desiccation.  We will be busy trying to button up these important maintenance practices before it gets cold next Wednesday.
We have been busy the last couple of weeks spraying all of the fairways and tees for snow mold.  We have also winterized the irrigation system and Prindle’s Pub for the season.  The approaches have been deep-tined and we are currently in the process of topdressing them with sand. 
Ridgeway opened for play on March 17th and will close on November 22nd  which will make it the longest golf season on record.  Although no projects are planned this winter we will be busy as there is always work to be done.  Keep following the blog for more updates and information in the coming weeks and months.  Thanks and we hope for an early spring in 2013!

Friday, November 16, 2012

Sustainable Golf Course Maintenance



Over the next few weeks, The Golf Channel will be covering several Australian professional golf tournaments.  This is noteworthy because many of the maintenance practices that we have implemented here at Ridgeway have been used on Australian and British Isles courses for decades. 
Specifically, by emphasizing the better grasses (i.e., bentgrasses and fescues), we can achieve our goal of sustainable maintenance practices which yield healthy turf and optimum playing conditions.  In this post, I will describe what our Australian friends have in common with us, plus share the benefits we have already noticed in the last year at Ridgeway.  Keep in mind, this is only a synopsis of what is detailed in our Best Practiced Plan, and the goal here is to highlight some of the major components and successes of our maintenance program.
I.                    Money Savings
Our philosophy is predicated on growing hearty, robust turf that is not overly reliant on water, fertilizer and pesticides.  This is achieved by implementing programs that benefit bentgrass over Poa annua.  We focus on growing roots not shoots.  We embrace solutions that focus on long-term problems and don't rely on treating short-term symptoms.  Unlike agriculture that focuses on yield as its primary objective, we focus on surface preparation.  The continuous use of water, fertilizer, and pesticides enhances Poa annua encroachment, which is fine if you can live with the cost of applying theses amendments on a regular basis.  To date, we have made significant savings in both pesticide and fertilizer usage at Ridgeway.  Both are down about 30-40% from previous years. 
II.                  Less Environmental Impact
Promoting  bentgrass not only allows us to be more fiscally responsible, we are also promoting environmentally sustainable practices.   It is our duty to be environment stewards by using fewer pesticides and less water and fertilizer.  Also, our mowing schedule has been reduced because we roll our greens more frequently.  This results in less pollution overall.
III.                Increased Playability
On the playability front, we focus on more aeration not less.  But because we do not rely on core aeration as our only means of cultivation, we are able to have less downtime in the playability of our fine turf areas.  This past season, we did not core aerate our putting surfaces, and we hope to do the same next year.  We instead use long, narrow pencil tines which penetrate 6-12” in depth.   This allows for water infiltration, compaction relief, and long vigorous root structure. This process has little if any affect on playability.     10” roots on greens were pretty normal throughout the 2012 season as opposed to 1-3” roots in prior seasons, even though we used less water, fertilizer, and pesticides.  Because the root structure was good, we have enhanced stress tolerance and better turfgrass color.
If you watch the coverage on The Golf Channel this week and in the coming weeks, you will see what promoting for the better grasses does and how it will benefit our course.  You will likely hear the announcers discussing it.  Ridgeway’s maintenance philosophy (like many courses in the Australian sandbelt) has many great benefits which save money, protect the environment and improve the overall playability of the course.  These are ideals I feel we can all get behind . . .  we do all of this by simply promoting for the better grass and embracing solutions not problems! 
P.S. Extra credit goes to any member who reads Practical Greenkeeping, by Royal and Ancient agronomist Jim Arthur.


Friday, October 5, 2012

Fairway seeding and upcoming maintenance

Fairway Seeding

This summer was very hot and extremely dry; our fine turf areas did very well despite the weather.  However there are a couple of exceptions on some small areas of our fairways where some turf thinned out and died. This week we slit-seeded these areas with bentgrass, topdressed with sand, and used covers to quicken the germination process.   These areas are small and are found on #1, #6, #9, #14, and #18. The picture below shows the final product.  Please do not hit off of the covers, they are marked as ground under repair. Thanks.
#1 after it has been
seeded, fertilized, topdressed,
and covered.
Chipping Green

With the chipping green closed for the season we took the opportunity to aggressively verti-cut, seed, topdress, water, and cover the entire complex to allow for faster recovery.  We will keep these covers on all fall and most likely when we open next spring.


Range Tee

Next week we will be working on the range tee so it can be ready for next season. We close the range tee this time year to allow it to heal in for next year’s play.  If we continued to hit off of the tee, most of the divots generated in October and November would not recover until late next spring. 

Next week we will be deep-tining, heavily over seeding, fertilizing, topdresssing and covering the range tee so that it will be in good shape for next season.

#13
The large depressions behind and to the south of #13 will be filled in with soil and seeded in the upcoming weeks.  Since we have a shortage of soil on the property, we will use plugs from our fairway aerification.

Depression on #13
Filled with plugs from aerification.
Naturalized Areas
In the closing weeks of the 2012 golf season we will be mowing down the natural “fescue” areas found throughout the course.  By mowing these areas we keep out larger weeds, shrubs and trees from taking over the fescue grass that was planted.  These areas have come a long way and should be greatly improved next season.  Natural areas while not maintenance free, do cut down on rough mowing and add texture to the golfing landscape.

Natural Area on #12

 
Small Improvements

In the coming weeks we will be adding some more mulch to bare areas just at the end of cart paths.  So far this has worked well and looks much nicer than it did previously.  Also we will be adding some more rock barriers to the edges of our cart paths to keep traffic from trampling turf.  We have recieved some nice comments on the rocks and we hope to slowly incorporate more from now until next season.    











Fairway Aerification Update

So far tee and fairway aerfication has been great!  The nice dry weather has allowed us to get a lot accomplished. To date almost all of the fairways and tees are completed except #2 and all par 3 holes.  The holes that are completed look very clean and in most cases almost completely healed in already.  If the weather cooperates and our equipment continues to hold up we should get done by early next week.  


Taken from #3 fwy
day of aerification

#12 Fwy one week after aerification.






 


Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Reminders

Chipping Green

Today September 19th, the chipping green is closing for the season to let the green and approach heal in for next year.  The green has many design flaws but we hope to make it more playable for next season.  We are going to overseed and topdress this area so it is imperative that we keep people off so seed can germinate effectively. 

Driving Range Tee

October 2nd the grass portion of the range tee will be closing for the season. The driving range will still be open but hitting off mats only. Keeping people off of the grass portion will allow the tee to heal in for next year's practice.

Core Aeration of Fairways and Tees

Starting September 24th fairways and tees will be core aerated.  We will be aerating one hole at a time to minimize its affect on play.  Winter rules are in effect on fairways that are or have been aerated. Thanks!

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Upcoming Events

September 10th

Next Monday September 10th, we will be deep needle tining, topdressing and overseeding greens.  Deep needle tining has been done 5 times already this year with little affect on playability.  If you come out to play next Monday you can expect some inconsistencies in the greens, because each green will be in different stages of completion.  Please be patient while we finish this important process and greens should be back to normal by Tuesday.

What can I expect the greens conditions to be like after Monday?  The greens should be good other than the obvious small holes and maybe some sand. Ball roll and smoothness should be fine because the holes are only 0.18" in diameter and heal in very quickly. The first couple of times this process was done it went unnoticed by golfers.

Why are we deep needle tining and what are the benefits?  This process has shown to greatly improve the health of our greens.  This entire summer season we had roots over 8-10" in ALL of our greens despite one of the hottest summers on record.  With warm September soil temperatures we aim to enhance our root structure even further.  Enhanced root structure is not the only benefit to deep needle tining, water infiltration and compaction relief are just a couple of other side benefits to this process.


September 24th-??

We will begin core aerification of our fairways and tees on Monday September 24th.  This process will be the same as last year with one fairway done at a time.  Once a fairway has been cored, picked up and blown we will move on to the next hole.  This will minimize the amount of disturbance to one hole at any given time.  Last year this process took 17 days.  We hope to stay around this number this year but that will depend entirely on weather and any mechanical issues. Please play winter rules on fairways that have been or are in the process of being aerified.

Fall Fling September 8th

It's never too late to sign up for the fall fling, it is a fun format and we hope to see you this Saturday.