Here's the practical reality for just a normal golf course: set the rough mower to desired height (for us 2"), assign a guy to mow it continuously, days off it grows, days on start over, rinse and repeat for entire growing season. That is a full time man/expense and the rough varies with his schedule and the seasonal changes. We're a compact course at about 125 acres of turf and can mostly do it with one guy plus fill in labor for exceptional growth. We are irrigated, in the US, have about 5 full time greenskeepers and fill in during peak growth with others. I would say we're lean, maybe bare minimum as far as maintenance budget. Anyone who does it for less gets rain and makes up for it with more labor as needed. I'm mot proud of this; it's the hand we're dealt in our market. As for the quality of the crew, that's debatable. I've got guys who care, for what I pay them, and that is key. I think it works, but not for high end club. OTOH, we're not a dog tract either. You'd enjoy a round here, The realty is we manage our rough, our course, and try to keep the maintenance in proportion with our revenue. We aren't winning. That's a problem for golf and these effete discussions about is not ideal. No offense to courses that debate mowing lines and height of rough cut, but a pretty good golf course struggling to make it is a problem. I don't want your sympathies. It's a tough business. The problem is unrealistic expectations in your market and mine. In mine, I need to charge more, in most of yours, you need to spend less.
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