We started work on the 7th green on Monday and our "Fall" aeration of greens, tees and approaches is wrapping up today. We just finished applying sand to approaches, got another roll on greens and gave them their first mow this afternoon when the sand was dry. It has been a productive week for sure, even with the light misty rain we received yesterday totaling only 0.07". We are still continuing to miss the big hitting rain storm that we so greatly need while others around us even here on Cape Ann are getting a good drink; the deflector shields are real and they're up over the course. It happens to also be budget season so I'll be putting that together over the next few weeks for next year. August and September are probably the busiest time for our team as we also start to lose staff back to college and high school.
Our college crew finished yesterday with us; special thanks to Aiden Doke, Drew Johnson and Jackson Colbert who will all be returning to their respective schools with an additional $400 from the Robert Porter Scholarship courtesy of the membership here at Bass Rocks. Thank you for supporting the team that we really rely on and best of luck to them this upcoming school season.
As I mentioned, aeration is wrapping up; we utilized 3/4 inch solid tines on the greens and collars again this application with a solid dose of 1mm sand that was brushed in and rolled. Tees and approaches were cored or solid tined depending on the need for either and sand has been applied as necessary. I fertilized the greens on the Saturday morning of the Burke with 0.3 lb/1000 ft² of a soluble nitrogen product to get the turf growing vigorously this week. This will help the holes heal up faster and allow the grass to grow through any excess sand. This, and us raising heights to 1/8 of an inch will temporarily slow ball roll for roughly the next 10 days as they recover. Heights will be brought back down to our regular height once the sand has firmly settled into the turf canopy. You will notice that we did not aerate the chipping green or any of the greens in the meadows. Those greens are the ones we will be utilizing to plant the new 7th green; it didn't make sense to me to do them all 2 times in the same month with such an aggressive process so you'll enjoy those for the next few weeks until the green is ready to plant. Once 7 is ready we will need to harvest the plugs along with seed to start the grow in process. Unfortunately, I cannot give you a date for that as I don't exactly know when the green will be completed for planting.
So far the 7th green hasn't given me any surprises; everything under the surface, as of this morning is what I had expected and hoped for. We are encountering some boulders and some very cool ledge outcroppings that will make for a really interesting and challenging new green complex. Please resist the urge to enter the construction area for your safety and that of the contractors. People walking around are not only a distraction and a safety hazard but will also slow the process down. As expected, we are massaging the original plan, moving mounding, adding and subtracting bunkers and working with visual cues to place features in their proper places. The hole was laid out on Monday with our team which includes the architect Robert McNeil, myself and Jim Deemer, the incredibly talented shaper for Country Golf . We reconvened yesterday to assess our progress, make a few changes and rough in some more features. I expect we will do the same again on Friday as things really start to take shape and we get to the left side of the work area. I'll also be meeting with the irrigation team to lay that out on Friday and assess those costs. We harvested the sprinklers, valves and boxes for reuse from the old green and disconnected it from the irrigation system first thing this past Monday morning prior to ripping things up. I'm expecting the actual green construction process to start early next week with the drainage and gravel layers being the first order of business. The materials will be trucked into the sand bin storage area and hauled on site a small load at a time. Please realize there will be MANY loads of materials coming down the 12th and 3rd holes, behind the 11th green to the construction site. The construction team will have priority so please don't tee off of 3 or 12 when they are coming through. Also, be cognizant of them while you are putting on 11; this might be a great time to practice our putting with noise and distractions. As always, thank you for your patience and understanding.
Things will really start to take shape and become more apparent in the next 3 days. Right now there are lots of stockpiled materials as we rough in features like bunkers, cart paths and obviously the green . Here are a few photos that won't mean much but might peak your interest. I may create another post after the weekend as the "piles" of dirt make it to their final destinations and the entire area has some form. It will still be difficult as its just a mass of brown but you'll start to get the idea.
No comments:
Post a Comment