The best time for firmness and conditioning, temperatures, etc. would be mid October to late November.
It is the driest time of the year, the rye would be established, temperatures are dropping a bit, but still warm.
Temperatures would be about like April but no spring downpours or strong storms.
While October and November would probably be the best time for firmness on bermuda fairways and bent greens, this would not be the case if overseeded.
Didn't we learn this in the November 2020 Masters?
The rye is still soft that time of year due to its relative immaturity.
Palmetto(overseeded) was absolutely fiery,bouncy and fast this past late February March before the March 31 rain came, it's never fast or firm on young rye in the fall.
If I were czar at ANGC, sure I would remove/limb quite a few trees, mostly for spectators.
But not even close to a majority, just some removal of the Hootie era plus pruning that any course should do over time.
I'd also push back some of the ornamental stuff(trees right off 14 green on right, short right of 10, all the stuff left on 18)
What would 13 be with no trees at the corner?
Vertical hazards, where appropriate, make for interesting golf-Having attended The masters for nearly 50 years, some of my favorite, most memorable shost involved trees.
There were trees there to begin with and many were planted early as the course opened.But sure, I would remove some trees-say 15%-many of which are featureless redundant pines-which is a lot of trees.
Nuking every single tree on an inland parkland property is the same as planting trees on a links
variety and natural settings can work together.
Kalen,
They named the holes for TREES on the property!-Jones was around nearly 40 years after construction.
Not saying he didn't like the terrain, but he surely liked the trees enough to name the holes after them.