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CSGC Links News February 2015 - No 3

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FebrUARY Links Meeting report Links News Issue No 3 February 2015 The County Sligo Golf Club February 2015 Do we need Super fast Greens? Editor Vincent McGee
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Page 1: CSGC Links News February 2015 - No 3

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FebrUARY Links

Meeting report

Links  News  Issue  No  3  

February  2015    

The  County  Sligo  Golf  Club   February  2015  

Do we need Super fast Greens?

Editor  

Vincent  McGee  

Page 2: CSGC Links News February 2015 - No 3

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The  County  Sligo  Golf  Club   February  2015  

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The  February  meeting  of  the  Links  Committee  took  place  on  Monday  17th.  

Links meeting

The  Greens  are  showing  signs  of  recovery  from  the  disease  damage    which  appeared  just  before  Christmas.    The  soil  temperature  has  just  started  to  rise  so  with  the  correct  nutrients  input  and  light  top  dressing  I  hope  to  see  a  good  recovery  in  the  next  two  to  three  weeks.  

 Although  we  have  damage  on  the  greens  they  are  still  running  good  for  this  time  of  year.  (Running  at  7.8  feet  on  the  stimpmeter).  

Work  is  still  slow  on  the  links  due  to  the  new  course  improvements  which  we  are  still  concentrating  on.    

Construction  of  the  new  bunker  on  the  left  side  of  5th  Green  has  started  today  (Feb  17th).    

There  is  a  small  adjustment  to  be  carried  out  on  the  right  hand  side  bunker  at  the  green.  Once  the  new  bunker  is  built  we  will  be  tidying  up  around  the  green  and  laying  new  turf.  

 

Course manager’s report

Links Committee  

Chairman:    Serryth  Heavey  Aidan  Doyle  Carmel  Hatt  Paraic  Hanley  Mary  Durcan  

Vincent  McGee  Oliver  McDonagh  

Terry  Brady  

Mats remain in play on

fairways and Par 3 tee boxes

on both courses until

the end of February.

Page 3: CSGC Links News February 2015 - No 3

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The  County  Sligo  Golf  Club   February  2015  

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Work  carried  out  in  February  

february

Greens:    

• Greens  been  sprayed  with  insecticide  to  prevent  bird  damage  (picking).  • Sprayed  with  fertiliser  to  help  recovery.  • All  greens  have  been  top  dressed  with  approximately  15  tons  of  sand.  • Solid  tined  with  10mm  tines  (No  disruption  to  greens).    • Penetrant  Wetting  Agent  (to  prevent  and  cure  dry  patch  and  to  move  water  through  

the  soil  surface  and  into  the  root  zone)  has  been  applied.      Tees:  

• All  tees  have  been  sprayed  with  Iron  &  Seaweed.  • Ongoing  divoting  of  tee  boxes  on  both  courses.  

General:  

• Turfing  of  filled  drain  on  right  side  of  the  5th  Fairway  carried  out.  • New  hazard  post  put  in  up  both  sides  of  the  new  open  drain  on  the  5th.  Red  up  the  LHS  &  

White  Out  of  Bounds  LHS.  (Need  to  clearly  mark  start  &  Finish  of  Out  of  Bounds).  • Wind  breaker  has  been  erected  around  the  new  3rd  Green  for  protection.  • Marram  Grass  planted  at  new  mound  on  the  left  hand  side  of  the  1st    fairway.  • Installed  new  irrigation  around  the  2nd  &  5th  greens.  • The  14th  &  15th    greens  have  been  roped  off  for  protection  due  to  high  traffic  volume.

Page 4: CSGC Links News February 2015 - No 3

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The  County  Sligo  Golf  Club   February  2015  

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Work  planned  for  the  rest  of  February  

february

Greens:    

• Continue  with  top  dressing  on  greens.  • Brushing  to  get  a  cleaner  cut.  • Closely  monitor  greens  to  help  with  recovery.  

General:  

• Commence  re-­‐turfing  of  high  traffic  areas  on  golf  course.  • Build  a  new  bunker  on  the  left  side  of  the  5th  green.  • Samples  of  new  signage  on  tee  boxes  will  be  ready  for  the  next  Links  Committee  

meeting.  • Replace  broken  benches  on  the  course.  • Rough  Management  will  commence  on  the  Bomore  course.  • Marram  grass  to  be  planted  at  the  left  side  of  the  new  1st  Tee.  • Bunkers  will  be  edged  and  topped  up  with  sand  in  preparation  for  the  new  season.    • Divot  Fairways.  • Fairways  and  tees  will  be  sprayed  with  insecticide  to  prevent  the  birds  picking.  

Page 5: CSGC Links News February 2015 - No 3

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The  County  Sligo  Golf  Club   February  2015  

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Ladies  &  Men’s  Club    

Issues Raised at links meeting

Observation  that  speed  of  the  practice  putting  green  seldom  reflects  the  speed  of  the  on-­‐course  greens.  

Response:  Mark  advises  that  the  putting  green  has  possibly  been  cut  last  after  the  course  greens  thus  contributing  to  a  different  stimp  speed.  Going  forward  putting  green  will  be  cut  first  in  the  morning.  Possibility  of  members  going  before  the  time  sheet  is  live  and  not  giving  the  greenkeepers  a  chance  to  get  ahead  of  the  members.  

Suggestion  to  publish  stimp  speeds  of  greens  during  the  summer.  

Response:  Mark  is  looking  at  erecting  a  new  information  board  for  display  near  first  tee  box.  This  will  display  information  on  green  speed,  course  work  in  progress,  tees  in  play  and  general  guidelines.  

Is  there  a  special  file  to  archive  the  Course  Manager’s  monthly  report  for  future  reference?  

Response:  All  the  files  are  archived  on  the  Course  Manager’s  PC.    

 

Other  issues  discussed  at  the  meeting:  

West  of  Ireland  2015  

• The  Captain,  Aidan  Doyle,  advised  that  volunteers  will  be  needed  to  assist  with  the  running  of  this  year’s  event.  He  specifically  mentioned  the  new  Championship  tee  on  the  5th  which  will  need  to  be  marshalled  by  some  experienced  people.  The  biggest  concern  is  the  fact  that  you  cannot  see  players  on  the  tee  box  when  you  are  coming  up  from  the  Bomore  course  and  driving  range.  

• Course  Manager  Mark  suggested  that  we  explore  the  possibility  of  a  shuttle  bus  to  run  between  the  main  car  park  and  Bomore  and  ban  other  traffic.    

• The  Captain  suggested  that  a  sub  committee  be  set  up  to  deal  with  the  recruitment  of  marshals  and  volunteers  for  the  duration  of  the  championship.  

• This  will  be  discussed  further  at  the  next  meeting.  

Page 6: CSGC Links News February 2015 - No 3

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The  County  Sligo  Golf  Club   February  2015  

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…do we really want them?

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The  constant  demand  for  ever-­‐faster  surfaces  is  doing  this  industry  nothing  but  harm.  The  most  recent  advice  written  in  some  journals  and  magazines  is  to  cut  at  2mm  on  a  regular  basis  and  give  the  members  what  they  want.  

What  rubbish!  There  are  no  prizes  for  cutting  your  greens  at  a  height  so  absurdly  low  that  nothing  other  than  weeds  will  grow.  This  is  not  sustainable,  it  is  not  sensible  nor  is  it  necessary,  irrespective  of  the  soils,  the  grasses,  or  the  environment  you  have.  It  is  a  researched  fact  that  mowing  low  reduces  the  capacity  of  the  plant  to  photosynthesise.  Once  this  basic  metabolic  activity  is  compromised,  so  is  the  general  health  of  the  plant,  and  weakness  and  decline  is  inevitable  thereafter.  The  decline  may  take  longer  on  

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some  greens than  others  but  the  result  will  be  an  agronomic  and  playing  disaster  –  the  last  thing  any  club  needs  in  the  present  climate!  

Effective  course  management  is  all  about  finding  a  balance  between  the  requirements  of  the  golfer  and  the  requirements  of  the  plant.    However  while  the  requirements  of  the  plant  have  largely  stayed  the  same  over  recent  times,  the  requirements  and  expectations  of  the  golfer  have  changed  immeasurably.  There  is  an  insatiable  hunger  for  speed  at  all  costs  fuelled  by  television  and  tournament  golf.  Unfortunately  the  plant  we  rely  on  is  not  designed  to  be  pummeled  and  thrashed  by  man  and  machine  on  a  week-­‐by-­‐week  basis  and  unsurprisingly  it  needs  a  break  from  time  to  time.  

Super-fast greens

Page 7: CSGC Links News February 2015 - No 3

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The  County  Sligo  Golf  Club   February  2015  

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As  golfers  we  like  nothing  more  than  playing  on  firm  well  paced  putting  surfaces  where  the  ball  rolls  true  and  these  characteristics  can  be  achieved  without  recourse  to  absurd  mowing  heights.    

The  best  greens  in  this  country  comprise  native  brown  top  bent  and  fescue  grasses  with  annual  meadow  grass  mown  at  around  4mm  (for  routine  play)  and  perhaps  a  little  lower  for  special  events.    

With  occasional  rolling  and  verticutting  in  the  correct  circumstances  alongside  regular  top  dressing  these  greens  provide  good  natural  pace  without  needing  to  be  mown  any  more  tightly.  

��������������������������������������Perhaps  rather  than  being  prescriptive  about  heights  

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of  cut  we  should  focus  more  on  the  performance  of  our  greens.  This  means  measuring  the  quality  and  speed  of  roll  so  that  these  key  elements  deliver  for  the  golfer.  At  the  same  

time  we  should  be  measuring  the  health  of  the  component  plants  in  order  to  achieve  a  performance  balance  between  the  surface  and  the  plant  system.    

It’s  not  about  height  of  cut  it  is  about  performance.  So  let  us  

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refrain  from  talking  specifics,  particularly  when  it  comes  to  height  of  cut.    

The  adoption  of  the  2mm  recommendation  across  the  country  would  ruin  many  of  our  courses  and  create  an  abundance  of  drought  and  disease  prone  turf.  It  would  do  very  little  for  the  finer  grasses  we  work  so  hard  to  encourage  and  would  promote  annual  meadow  grass,  which  as  a  ruderal  species  would  thrive  in  a  highly  pressurised  environment.    

Top  players  are  becoming  increasingly  vocal  about  the  failings  of  annual  meadow  grass  under  tournament  conditions  around  the  world.    

In  the  UK  and  Ireland  with  their  wet  maritime climate, the  water  retentive  thatch

‘a drought

and disease prone turf’

Page 8: CSGC Links News February 2015 - No 3

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The  County  Sligo  Golf  Club   February  2015  

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it produces  along  with  its  incessant  seeding  are  real  problems  when  it  comes  to  producing  smooth  and  firm  surfaces  throughout  the  day.    

It  would  do  nothing  but  harm  to  golf  course  budgets  at  a  time  when  clubs  have  to  be  careful  and  ever  mindful  of  costs  and  in  some  cases  it  would  lead  to  already  well-­‐paced  surfaces  becoming  unplayable.    

Finally  in  a  climate  where  there  is  a  desire  to  make  golfers  play  more  quickly  to  shorten  the  time  it  takes  to  play  a  round  of  golf,  it  would  be  the  death  nail  for  pace  of  play.    

Most  golfers  simply  cannot  cope  very  well  with  stimpmeter  speeds  in  excess  of  9ft  so  giving  them  10  or  11ft  would  make  an  already  slow  game  even  slower.  

Sadly  the  results  of  prolonged  low  mowing  does  nothing  for  the  plant,  the  golfer  or  the  reputation  of  the  clubs  who  practice  it.  Resist  it  at  all  costs  and  instead  focus  on  a  holistic and  sustainable  programme  of  work,  which  will  deliver  good  performance  for  the  player,  for  the  plant  and  for  the  pocket.  

Author:  Alistair  J  Beggs  (STRI)  

‘low mowing

does nothing for the plant’

Page 9: CSGC Links News February 2015 - No 3

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County  Sligo  Golf  Club  2015  ©  

 

Links  News  Editor:  Vincent  McGee  

Please  contact  me  with  any  comments  or  Links  issues.  

The  views  expressed  in  contributed  articles  are  not  necessarily  the  views  of  the  editor  of  this  publication  or  Co  Sligo  Golf  Club.  Editorial  content  and  photographs  cannot  be  reproduced  without  prior  permission  from  the  editor.  


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