Friday, April 24, 2026

As I mentioned last week the warmer weather was just what we needed leading into winter and I must say we have an excellent cover of grass across the courses now.  It almost felt like a winter blast this week with cold southerly winds accompanied by frequent cloud bursts.  We received 20mm on course overnight into Friday and dare I say we needed it.  It was certainly a week for rainbows with the scattered showers and blasts of sun.

A pot of gold awaits @ 16W green??
 

The front bunker on 8W was re-drained this week which is part of an ongoing program we are conducting on both courses.  There was a layer of fairly impervious clay just above the existing drainage pipe so not much water had ever found its way down to it.  We also filled some of the "melon" holes on 13W fairway and heavily topdressed the area.

The rain forecast for the next few days isn't good for some of the work planned next week which includes adding some sand to selected River bunkers.  Obviously moving sand around needs dry firm conditions so hopefully the forecasters have got it wrong. 

It's hard to believe that 12 months ago we were still knee deep in TCAlfred recovery with stumps being ground out.  We finished up totaling 302 stumps from the cyclone but you would hardly know anything happened now.  The big winner has been some of the turf with the extra sunlight lapped up by the grass.

One of the biggest - RHS 2W tee.


Friday, April 17, 2026

32 degrees in the shed compound today was most welcome as was the weather during the week.  Light winds and warm dry conditions is just what we are after at this time of year and the condition of the courses at weeks end shows it.  It was nice to get some compliments on the River course from Monday's Masters shotgun, particularly on the greens.  Given a 10am shotgun we were able to double mow and double roll before play which is a time luxury we don't often get.  Wednesday had us scrambling again to get a single mow and roll in front of a 6.30 two tee start.

The course closures are also a huge help with work getting done without interference from play.  This week on Tuesday we were able to drain the LHS fairway bunker on 5R that has been a long term issue and then on Thursday following the vets we got the River greens sanded which we have been trying to get done for some time but the weather always threw a spanner in the works.  That will be the final sanding for this season.

Final sanding for the season.

 

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

As part of the Club's centenary we have purchased some commemorative pin flags that will be in use from Wednesday April 15.  

So the colour coded pin placement system will be on hold while these flags are in use. 

 

Sample of the new pin flag.

 

Friday, April 10, 2026

I mentioned last week that we are mostly about preparing the turf for winter at the moment and a superb week of weather has certainly helped move that along.  The tees and fairways have an excellent cover of grass and have had a surge of growth this week which is exactly what we want.  We actually probably had too much grass on the tees when we arrived on Tuesday after five days of no mowing due to Easter and some wet humid conditions.  We have also had a surge of late season crowsfoot germination that I don't really want to treat at the moment for fear of setting the turf back when we have it in such good condition.  The crowsfoot will "melt" out as we get cooler.

The way the weather has been this past month we haven't had to think about irrigation so it was quite nice today to have to remember how to run the system.  Our pipework is always pressurised  and ready to go but when the weather has been as bad as it has, we certainly haven't needed the new system.  While we aren't using any water the small jockey pump that keeps the system at pressure starts twice a day at the most.  The old system had so many leaks in it that the old jockey pump would start several times an hour so there is a significant saving there on power, not to mention wear and tear on pipework.

Weather permitting next week we will be adding some sand to some of the heaviest used bunkers and if the weather continues we may try and sneak some sand on to the River greens as a final leveller moving in to winter.  As mentioned above the grass is having one last surge so we have lots of mowing to catch up on especially after the recent short weeks.  

And I can't let The US Masters pass without some comment.  Superintendents the world over call golfers responses to the Masters as "Augusta Syndrome" when players ask "why can't our course be that good"?  It's fairly well documented that the maintenance budget at Augusta is almost infinite and they have a huge crew numbering 60 that is supplemented by an army of more than 100 volunteers for the tournament.  Indeed, most of the volunteers are not a "Dad's Army" but Course Supers from some of the worlds best Clubs.  I think I counted 560 names on our timesheet today which is probably a years worth of play for Augusta!!   A few bits of trivia about Masters week is that it is the first PGA Tour event played on Bentgrass greens this year and there are only 44 bunkers on the course.  The greens average just on 600 square metres which is about the size of 12W at Cool Tweed even though they look much bigger.  For a Course Super there's probably not a more high pressure job and this is Augusta's main mans 2nd Masters after his predecessor did 27.  Having said that the incumbent has been at Augusta for 16 years.  Well I'm off to watch some R1 highlights.......

Fairway mowing Augusta style.

 

 

 


Sunday, April 5, 2026

And still it rains!!  We just can't seem to get a break and although there hasn't been big totals this past week the persistent showers are more than annoying.  We have got quite a lot of disease pressure across the courses, particularly in the greens with the constant leaf wetness providing the perfect situation for disease to flourish, and flourishing it is.  579mm YTD March 31 for us compared to the airport @ 520mm and if you go north to Windaroo GC they recorded just 286mm!!  So our 252mm for March nearly topped their YTD total. It's certainly lucky that we are considered to be a "dry" course and can take a reasonable amount of rain but this is ridiculous.  Once again the course closure on Tuesday this week was seriously affected with light showers most of the day meaning we couldn't get the planned work done that requires dry conditions.

A lot of what we are doing on course at the moment is planned to get the turf in the best condition possible as we steam towards winter with the daylight hours shortening and temperatures dropping.  All playing surfaces have been fertilised to try and achieve any growth we can to bolster the surfaces.  The continual wet conditions are seeing some damage from the cart traffic in areas so please watch where you drive and avoid the soft slippery areas.

One good news story for the week is one of the "habitat trees" that we left between the two 18's got some new residents this week.