Wednesday, July 31, 2013

The 2013 Kirby Invitational

The annual Kirby Invitational was this past weekend and a great field of 117 participated.  Chris and his staff did an excellent job and I was proud of my staff as well.  Alot of overtime was put into the week to make it great.  Davin White fired a 66 Saturday but came out Sunday sluggish.  With his slow start that allowed a few others to get back into the mix.  Cody Sapp and Bo Burdette both played well.  With a 2 shot lead over White and Burdette,  Cody Sapp came to 18 looking to seal the deal.  But with the Championship flights playing 18 as a Par 4 anything could happen.  Cody double bogeyed and both Davin and Bo birdied the hole.  Bo and Davin played #1 and 9 with Bo sinking a Par putt for the win.
Congrats to you Bo!
                                                 The winning putt

 

Agronomic practices......explained

We do many things on the golf course which may leave you scratching your head.  Why do we put sand on the greens?  Why do we verticut the greens?  Why did we circle cut fairways?  Why do you spray greens so often?  Why is the rough so thick?

These are just a few of the questions I get, so I will try to answer as best as possible.

The reason we verticut is to remove excess thatch and try to control grain.  Along with verticutting we also use brushes mounted to our mowers to promote an upright plant.  It is crucial to verticut greens often.  During a grow in of new greens a Champion bermuda specialist told me this; If you don't verticut and topdress Champion bermuda it will grow itself to death.  This grass is very aggressive and we have to control it.  That statement has definatley stuck with me.  This is also the reason we put sand on the greens.  By doing this it fills voids in the turf canopy and helps smooth the surface, providing a better ball roll.

We circle cut fairways from time to time to get a better cut.  Since we are "old school" and mow fairwys with a gang mower it is tough to truly cut all blades of grass.  Our fairways aren't great, with dips and low spots which results in missed lines or "mowhawks" that the large reels just can't mow in straight lines.  So we circle cut, which really cleans them up.  We will have to do this once every 2 or 3 weeks during the growing season.

I know you have seen me on the red Toro sprayer driving around.  It is one of our most important pieces of equipment.  I prefer to "spoon feed" fertilizer and nutrients to the greens.  I spray small amounts of different products on a weekly basis, usually on Thursdays.  I feel as if I have more control of what greens are doing and what they need by doing this.  Weekly tanks usually consist of soluble fertilizer, micronutrients, fungicides and growth regulators.

Rough.  I know it's thick!  I have several responses to this.  We have had OVER 50" of rain through July(and it's rained an Inch this morning).  Combine that with heat and BOOM, we have the healthiest rough since I've been here.  Another response is the fact that our terrain is not good.  Rocks, roots, low spots, high spots are many reasons we just cannot mow very low.  Our equipment would be in the shop for repair on a daily basis if we tried to mow much lower.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Course Update

Sorry it has been so long since the last post.  I was out of town last week at the beach with my family.  We went to Panama City to watch my son Thomas play in  a Grand Slam baseball World Series event.  The boys finished 3rd in a rain shortened tournament.  Despite receiving ~11" of rain for the week, it was good to get away for a little while to recharge the batteries!

My view for the week of the 4th.  Hard to beat this!
Now back to reality...

Alot has happened since the last post.

We received 8" rainfall last week.  That is in impressive amount of rain, especially since most fell Wednesday-Sunday.  With all the rain brings flooded areas and the overflow pipe in the lake at #10/18 was damaged.  It is about 6 feet below full.  We hope to have it repaired soon.

Also this week we aerified the greens.  This is a VITAL process that helps ensure healthy greens.  We began our process with an aggressive verticut in 3 directions followed up by a mower to clean up.  We then topdressed heavy and core aerified.  Our new Toro machine has an attachment which pulls the cores to the edge to be picked up. 
Finished product.  All greens were fertilized and should bounce back quickly. 

With all this recent rain grass has really grown, ALOT.  We are mowing as much as we can, so please be patient as we try to get the golf course back in shape.


And by the way, it is currently raining.....