This picture shows why we have frost delays. Not good! |
As anybody knows, it is no fun waiting out a frost delay, the uptick is that the consistent low temperatures froze the soil profile which produces, you guessed it- FIRM playing surfaces.
Green #7 with the frozen pin location. |
However, one not so great benefit was that our greens were frozen so thoroughly that it was impossible to rotate the pin location and left our golfers playing the same pin for a week straight. Every attempt that we made to cut a fresh cup either bent the edges of the shell of the cup cutter and left our course set up guy feeling sheepishly defeated.
That just goes to prove that while we eliminated the "problem" rainfall, we really just traded one problem for another. I watched some golfers attempt to insert a wooden tee into some of our tee boxes and let me tell you, they could have used a 10 pound hammer to drive it into the ground!
My point is, while I would love to take all of the credit for the awesome playing conditions, I will admit that the weather produced conditions that were the agronomy staff's biggest ally. We were able to get the golf course all mowed up without making a single rut.
Either way you look at it, we can all agree on one thing regarding that stretch of weather: a good change of pace!
Looking down Hole #1 with freshly mowed tee decks & fairway. |
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