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Carl Johnson

OT - Aerification Closures
« on: Yesterday at 08:24:22 PM »
What's reasonable, in your experience, for course closures for aerification?  Assume course is always closed to play on Monday, so aerification can begin then.  Greens only aerification - in addition to Monday, how many more days should the course be closed?
Same question, but assume both greens and fairways aerification?  We've gone from a history of getting the greens done in two days, to now, 4 or 5 days when the course is closed.  I know, I know, every situation is different, and how you combine the work on fairways and greens, or not, but are there any general principles.  Naturally, one wants as many play days as possible as well as a well-conditioned course.  I'm not saying it is easy.

Kyle Harris

Re: OT - Aerification Closures
« Reply #1 on: Yesterday at 08:31:29 PM »
What's reasonable, in your experience, for course closures for aerification?  Assume course is always closed to play on Monday, so aerification can begin then.  Greens only aerification - in addition to Monday, how many more days should the course be closed?
Same question, but assume both greens and fairways aerification?  We've gone from a history of getting the greens done in two days, to now, 4 or 5 days when the course is closed.  I know, I know, every situation is different, and how you combine the work on fairways and greens, or not, but are there any general principles.  Naturally, one wants as many play days as possible as well as a well-conditioned course.  I'm not saying it is easy.


However long it takes.

Snark aside, I'll ask a return question: How soon after completing the process are you happy to play on the surface? And if it takes too long to get there, how many more resources are you willing to spend to speed up the process?
http://kylewharris.com

Constantly blamed by 8-handicaps for their 7 missed 12-footers each round.

“Split fairways are for teenagers.”

-Tom Doak

Andrew Harvie

Re: OT - Aerification Closures
« Reply #2 on: Yesterday at 08:36:40 PM »
What's reasonable, in your experience, for course closures for aerification?  Assume course is always closed to play on Monday, so aerification can begin then.  Greens only aerification - in addition to Monday, how many more days should the course be closed?
Same question, but assume both greens and fairways aerification?  We've gone from a history of getting the greens done in two days, to now, 4 or 5 days when the course is closed.  I know, I know, every situation is different, and how you combine the work on fairways and greens, or not, but are there any general principles.  Naturally, one wants as many play days as possible as well as a well-conditioned course.  I'm not saying it is easy.


However long it takes.

Snark aside, I'll ask a return question: How soon after completing the process are you happy to play on the surface? And if it takes too long to get there, how many more resources are you willing to spend to speed up the process?


This. When I was a pro at St. George's, we used to close for two days early in my tenure there but the membership wanted the golf course open more, so they started to do a few holes at a time for like, four days in the past couple years. Wretched process, and nobody would play that week anyway.


I think closing for five days seems reasonable to me if it means better surfaces, but 3 is maybe a realistic goal with a BoD and a greens chair to worry about.
Managing Partner, Golf Club Atlas

Kyle Harris

Re: OT - Aerification Closures
« Reply #3 on: Yesterday at 08:40:04 PM »
What's reasonable, in your experience, for course closures for aerification?  Assume course is always closed to play on Monday, so aerification can begin then.  Greens only aerification - in addition to Monday, how many more days should the course be closed?
Same question, but assume both greens and fairways aerification?  We've gone from a history of getting the greens done in two days, to now, 4 or 5 days when the course is closed.  I know, I know, every situation is different, and how you combine the work on fairways and greens, or not, but are there any general principles.  Naturally, one wants as many play days as possible as well as a well-conditioned course.  I'm not saying it is easy.


However long it takes.

Snark aside, I'll ask a return question: How soon after completing the process are you happy to play on the surface? And if it takes too long to get there, how many more resources are you willing to spend to speed up the process?


This. When I was a pro at St. George's, we used to close for two days early in my tenure there but the membership wanted the golf course open more, so they started to do a few holes at a time for like, four days in the past couple years. Wretched process, and nobody would play that week anyway.


I think closing for five days seems reasonable to me if it means better surfaces, but 3 is maybe a realistic goal with a BoD and a greens chair to worry about.


The problem with scheduling closures is the same problem we have with scheduling weather.
http://kylewharris.com

Constantly blamed by 8-handicaps for their 7 missed 12-footers each round.

“Split fairways are for teenagers.”

-Tom Doak

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