Aaron,
Read Ayn Rand "The Fountainhead" and substitute golf into it....it is the exact place of where we are today. The fox is running the henhouse....and I don't mean supts and pros....I mean industry "experts"
Mike I love Ayn Rand and have read FH but Atlas Shrugged is my Favorite....Capitalism the unkown ideal is great too although a little tougher read.
I think it's great you have a 4 year turf degree. How do I know? I know more than a few of the professors and their grantors etc...My father in law was the supt at a top 10 golf course for years and I have listened to him and his buddies laugh about the BS( in a good way) I think now I'm old enough to realize how much a degree doesnt teach...of course the entire world is now figuring that out...I think my biggest proof of the BS would be to use a good friend as an example. He works with me some and is a Penn St turf head, has worked as director of golf maintenance at a large national resort and was at the little course in East Ga near the river. He purchased a course I had designed, built and owned about 5 years ago. He now works the counter, cooks burgers and mows greens. He now sees the light and it would be good for a lot of pros and supts to pay admission to hear him talk...
Mike I understand your points but it's not one size fits all, too many variables but I bet it'd be great convo for sure. A little story to add to yours...I had a friend of my brothers who owns a mom and pop not to far from me and we were at an outing at their place and his dad was complaining that he felt all MSU wanted him to do was spray so I finally interupted him to ask who said that to him. He never actually talked to msu but was filled in on that from a salesmen. He doesn't employ a sup and in five minutes of schooling his son on why he had horrible dollar spot on his greens (which he was spraying for) we had his issue solved with less chemical, lower costs and better putting quality. A little information is dangerous and I guess I'm just trying to point out that myself and the other supers I personally exhcange knowlegde with don't think the way you've pointed out and we try to do whats right but it's a big industry. Now I will say that your father inlaw probably worked in the days when BS was common and mowing on a tractor with gangs
a beer in one hand and cig hanging out of their mouth was normal. I don't dispute what the so called good old days were like.
Who are these industry "experts"? All I can tell you is when it comes to sustainability sups are all looking at anyway we can to provide quality playing conditions with less. That means less money, less chemical, less food, less water, shrink our properties...etc. Are you saying we got to this point totally on the basis of industry experts?
I will say the next time I do something at my club based on the fox would be the first since it's my hide on the line but I'm sure there are a lot of them out there who follow like sheep.
Ben,
I haven't been in school for almost 20 years so I don't want to comment on exact cirriculum now a days but I can tell you that plant health even back then was number one, in fours years I'd had one class that dealt with chemical usage. It's changed a lot and it's still changing and it will continue to change but it still makes up your basic foundation and your ability to build on it..is what seperates good sups from the average. I'd like to sit down with you after you've been a sup for 20 years with your butt in the chair, making all the decisions and answering to the owner, members or management and see how you view things. If your seeking this as a profession I wish you luck!
Enjoying the dialogue