Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Irrigation Project And Course Update

The irrigation project is moving along but will be held up for a day or two by the heavy rains. Alpine Irrigation will trench in a run of mainline alongside the north treeline on 15 and then cross over in front of the 15th tees and connect to the section of mainline that was installed across the 14th fairway earlier in May. By Friday they will also begin working on the lateral pipe lines and sprinkler placement on the 15th hole. As per usual the hole will play as a par 3. It had been suggested that there might be some temporary hole closures during the remainder of the project but I don't believe this will be necessary based on the procedure we have followed so far. After 15 is completed the next hole to be worked on will be #14 with mainline work continuing across the 13th hole and down the north side of #12. This pipe will  connect to the pipe that is presently supported out of the ground in front of the 12th tee. We will update the final phases as Alpine finishes the major work on #14.

To reiterate previous discussions please realize that this work is akin to major surgery. It is invasive and time is required for the golf course to recover. By time I don't mean a few weeks. It will take months. In fact we will likely be mending certain areas for the remainder of the season. Trench lines might settle, some sprinklers will need more leveling, sod that doesn't survive will need to be replaced and seeded areas take time to grow in. Good weather will help as will the efforts of the Turf Care staff. Alpine will need to finish up certain areas in addition to their install work but we want them to get the system in the ground, get out of the way of the membership, do their final touchups and leave. The new Toro system is active on the entire front 9 and on holes 16 and 17 to date.

The work is not pretty and is difficult to accept for some. The alternative was to keep irrigating with an outdated antiquated irrigation system that was limiting the future of the property. We have taken a step backwards in 2017 but have set ourselves up to take big steps forward beyond this season. At present the fit and finish of The Royal Mayfair are not what we are accustomed to but we are now at the forefront of irrigation management. 

Golf Course Update
  • The heavy rain and strong winds have left the course wet and in need of a major cleanup. At least 6 large trees have come down and there are a few hanging branches. A tree company will need to assist with some of the work.
  • The sodded greens are progressing well considering how quickly we put them back in play. They will be slower than the others but will get progressively smoother over the coming weeks.
  • Recovery on damaged fairways is slow. The type of turf on our fairways (predominately Poa annua) needs time and warm weather. That warm weather has finally arrived and as night time temperatures stay above 10C the Poa will finally begin to respond.
  • With the Turf Care team having to embark on extensive irrigation repairs something has to give. We are stretched to the limit having to look after the usual tasks in addition to the extra work. As a result we are behind on trim work, tree line rough mowing and bunker improvements such as edging and sand adjustment.
  • We are also behind on our topdressing of greens and aprons (not for long though). Mowing heights will be lowered next week on the greens and fairways. 
All for now






Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Change Of Plans

As the title suggests there has been a change in regards to the recovery plan for the 6th and possibly 2nd green. Our initial idea was to aerate, overseed with a new quick germinating bentgrass and give the Poa annua a chance to recover as it always does. Unfortunately the golf season being as short as it is in Edmonton does not lend itself to the type of recovery we initially wanted. This thinking does not synch with member expectations. Therefore we will sod the 40% of the green that is damaged on #6 on Friday, give it a a few days to recover and put it back into play. The end result will be better than waiting until the end of June for a slow recovery. The 2nd green is more difficult to deal with. There is less damage overall but it isn't concentrated so it may be a sod project completed in a few stages. That decision will come in the next 24 hours.

The warmup green will be ready for use by the May Long Weekend. The putting green will be aerated and overseeded and allowed to recover over time.

Note to consider:

  • Newer golf courses with bentgrass greens and or tees and Kentucky bluegrass fairways will fair better than older courses with predominantly Poa annua surfaces after winters such as we just experienced. There isn't an older Poa golf course in our area that hasn't had some degree of damage on some area of their course.
  • We came out of winter in March, April was terrible and now we have a warm beginning to May. The grace period of April which in the last few years has been very helpful to turf recovery was non existent. Overall conditions will improve daily. Keep in mind the course was covered in snow on April 24th. Nature does not care. It is what it is and no amount of money or expertise can change that. 

The irrigation work is progressing well as Alpine will move to the 16th hole on Friday. The 3rd hole reopens as the Par 5 but the back tees may need to be moved up to the whites for a few hours. The Turf Care team has been working on larger repair areas over the front 9 but we are changing that plan as well. We are now going to start on the first hole, complete all the repairs possible at this time then move to the 2nd hole and so on. The repairs are required because Alpine could not do a proper job of backfilling and sodding in cold wet and then ultimately very cold conditions in early to mid November. That was the trade off for doing work in the fall as opposed to the summer months. The repair work Alpine is doing now  on the back 9 should require much less attention from the Turf Crew.

Monday, May 8, 2017

Front 9 Opens And Irrigation Timeline

The Front 9 opens today after a week of nice weather that allowed Alpine Irrigation a much needed head start to finish the work on #4 and enough of #3 to open it as a par 4 for a few days. They will be working out in front of the tee and on the tee itself for the remainder of the week. Please advance around the corner to find the tee blocks approximately 400 yds. (white, blue and gold tees) and 300 yds. (red tees) from the 3rd green. Be mindful of the workers in this area and realize that there will be constant motion and noise as they install pipe, wire and sprinklers.

The Club will publish a work progress report from Alpine in the very near future but for now I can outline the next few weeks of work:

  • After #3 is completed they will work on #16 and also extend a short mainline pipe down the south side of the 16th hole to the east of the 17th tee complex.
  • #17 will be next and a section of mainline will be installed down the south side of the 18th hole and join up with previously installed pipe behind the 13th green.
  • The 15th hole will then be worked on with a section of mainline connecting to the 16th hole, running up the north side of #15 and connecting to the mainline (previously installed across the 14th fairway) near the Thor Guard location south of the 15th tee.

During this work holes will be shortened and possibly closed for very short periods if necessary (unlikely but no promises). Expect holes to play as Par 3's such as occurred last fall on #9. 

The Turf Care team will be continuously working on front 9 repairs over the foreseeable future. The task is daunting but we are making some headway. Large areas take priority and then hole by hole work following. The next few months will involve a lot of sod patching, aerating and verticutting/overseeding throughout. Warm weather will certainly speed up the recovery timeline.

Front 9 Notes:
  • Greens 2 and 6 are recovering albeit slowly. They will be constantly top dressed and many smaller spots will be plugged out. Larger areas will be monitored over several weeks and it is possible some sod may be used to help with recovery. The greens will stay in play but lower your expectations for the time being.
  • There is some plugging required on greens 7 and 8 that will commence soon.
  • The new fairway overseer purchased by the Club has arrived and will be put to good use on damaged locations. The Turfco Triwave 60 (google search for info) is now part of an ongoing program to introduce bentgrass on the fairways as we introduce a turf species to compete with the Poa annua. Our approaches are quickly becoming bentgrass dominant so it is hoped we can have some success on the fairways over time.
  • Turf from the 8th fairway is being used to replace dead sod or to compliment existing turf on fairways mainlines such as the mainline crossing the 18th hole. We will sod the area on the 8th hole in the near future.
  • Haul road repairs (specifically down the side of #9) will commence when the irrigation project is completed.
Last Note:

We have limited options for irrigation scheduling at present. As a result some watering will begin before dusk and run into the early mornings. The new system is slowly coming online and we should have automatic control soon which will help with front 9 turf recovery and also keep us from going insane . Lol. All for now.