Because everyone for the last 25 years insisted they cut all their trees down, and they had to fill the empty space somehow.
+1
-1. Obviously a huge dose of hyperbole. Exactly how many courses have cut all their trees down? By what order of magnitude are their course which need trees removed...maybe 100x? Its funny, I never saw a hole and thought, a tree or 50 would be a good addition.
Ciao
my +1...
had nothing to do with whether any or all trees should be removed or planted, just an acknowledgement of what is a very common reaction/response(planting of high ornamental/penal gras) when trees are removed.
In this era (particularly in the northeast)of near epidemic spread of Lyme disease, Lone Star meat allegies and Rocky Mountain spotted fever amongst avid golfers and nearly all of us in the golf industry, I am no fan of additional and widespread planting of "native" ball hunting gunch to please the aesthetic, "par protection" or photo opp ego of a zealous golf chairman who replaces mown rough or broken ground previously occupied by trees or maintained rough, by rarely maintained and cultivated tick enabling high grass symetrically framing both sides of many fairways.
-the theme of this thread...
I have heard several such "so what do we put there? comments in response to tree removal at the few clubs
I'm well acquainted with (which are considered quite forward thinking and well respected architecturally)-and see a lot of ball eating tick infested shite planted when trees are removed, so I know this is a conversation that occurs consistently, often with negative consequences.
Mowers are great herbicies as well as pesticides, and as I commented earlier, high grass could well be a native species, but regardless should be used with restraint and thoughtfully, as opposed to symetrically and ornamentally which dramatically increases the odds that it is "in play" and players spend the day traipsing through areas that dramatically increase their chances of serious disease
exactly the same way too many trees were planted in the past