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Archive for the ‘Golf Course’ Category

Drainage

Posted by mynormas on January 20, 2014

It is said that there are three important things on a golf course and they are: drainage, drainage and drainage.

In a talk to club managers in an MGA event, I tried to explain the issue especially the part about helping water to get to the drains: the dethatching, the scarifying and especially the aeration part.

Saliran adalah isu penting untuk padang golf, dan sebarang kawasan yang ditanam dengan rumput hiasan. Seorang pemain golf terkenal yang kini menjadi seorang pereka padang golf pernah berkata; “Ada tiga perkara yang paling penting untuk sebuah padang golf, saliran, saliran dan saliran”. Di sini saya cuba untuk menekan kan bahawa ianya bukan sahaja tentang parit dan salir air, tetapi ia juga tentang bagaimana air boleh tembus atau masuk ke dalam tanah. Contohnya melalui proses ‘Pengudaraan‘ ataupun ‘slicing’

Slicing will help with aeration and water penetration.

Slicing will help with aeration and water penetration.

 

Posted in Fields, Golf Course, Greens, Landscape, Lanskap, Padang, Padang Golf | 2 Comments »

20 year-old greens

Posted by mynormas on January 7, 2014

Some of us in Malaysia seem to make it look like there is an unwritten rule that greens need replacing at a certain age. I decided to explore this at a forum in Pahang, two years ago. These were my slides, some are self-explanatory and some… well you should have been there.

<div style=”margin-bottom:5px”> <strong> <a href=”https://www.slideshare.net/normas98/20-year-old-greens-for-upload&#8221; title=”20 year old greens. A discussion. ” target=”_blank”>20 year old greens. A discussion. </a> </strong> from <strong><a href=”http://www.slideshare.net/normas98&#8243; target=”_blank”>Normas Yakin</a></strong> </div>

 

Posted in Golf Course, Greens, Padang Golf | Leave a Comment »

Making greens cheaper

Posted by mynormas on December 4, 2013

Continuing my previous post about golf green’s construction, there are more than one way to construct a green, other than the USGA way.

Back in 1994, when I was still a young, new, beginner, trainee, novice, rookie (you get the idea) Assistant Superintendent, a new Superintendent from Australia joined the club I was working at and – to keep a long story short – after a few months, both of us were summoned into the Boss’ office. He asked us to sit down and after a few moments of dramatic silence while he rearranges stuff on his table; the Boss said “I need you two to build a green. It is for someone with a big house on top of a hill”

I got two problems with that statement. One; it ain’t a ‘house’ as we know it. Two; it’s not big, it’s humongous! If I were in the front lawn and needed to go to the toilet at the back of the house, I’d probably wet my pants by the time I reach it. Three; fresh from studying the USGA method of greens construction, I thought that’s going to cost a lot of time, money and effort. Four; will I be paid extra for this work? Five; just in case you were wondering – mathematics is not my strong point.

But Martin – the Superintendent – was cool about it. He brought me and a few workers to the site and told us to dig a hole in the ground. It was about 200 – 300 m2 big and about half a meter deep. “Great” I thought “Now I’m going to have a hands-on experience on green construction; this is going to look good on my CV”. Yeah. Really. Ok… maybe it’s more like: “Yahoo! Martin is going back to the club, the workers are going to be ones working, and I’m going to sit under that tree till 4pm for the next 30 days”

In USGA greens, one problem is material selection; it has criterias for gravel and various sand layers. Some clubs with strict construction superintendents have been known to reject enough lorry loads of sand to make a mountain out of one green. Other issues are the procedures and methods of construction. So I thought, while we wait for the right material, and while Martin fusses over the depth of each layer and stuff, I’ll have time to hone my poker skills.

That wasn’t the case, we dug the (big) hole, installed a network of herringbone drains, dumped sand on top of it, shaped the top a bit and then planted it. What?! That was it? What about the particle size? The bridging criteria? Hydraulic conductivity tests and stuff? My poker game?

Before we go any further, let’s be clear that this is not a golf course superintendent’s technical support manual. I write for the layman and for fun.

File pic.  Gambar hiasan.

File pic.
Gambar hiasan.

We talked about USGA greens in a previous post. But there is more than one way to build a green. There’s a few. Why are there many ways to build a green if the USGA method is supposed to be ‘the’ way? As always, the limiting factor for most golf courses, even in the US, is cost.

In the mid-1970s, two turfgrass scientists; Dr. John Madison and Mr Bill Davis from the University of California did some tests and concluded that using normal sand could produce acceptable golf greens. Their basis? Straight sand (and by that I mean just pure sand) placed over conventional drained basement. Unlike USGA greens, there is no gravel layer so California greens are cheaper and easier to install.

In 1998, the California greens method was further refined with some improvements; to use USGA criteria for selection of materials, consideration of local climate data and rootzone permeability to calculate sub-basement drain spacing and to use a much faster hydraulic conductivity than USGA greens. Some people think this then should be put under a third category of greens construction method: the hybrid California-USGA method.

But anyway, I also mentioned in a paragraph of the previous post that at least in one golf course I worked in; the greens not constructed in the USGA method were doing much better than the ones reportedly built as per USGA specs:

It was early this century (actually, this millenia) and I was then working in a golf course that had 18 holes of ordinary golf and 9 holes of par-3s. Every time rainy season comes, I will be fighting diseases and algae on the 18 and yet the  9-hole par-3 course were just humming along with no attention needed. I asked an old-time staff and from his description I could tell that the 18 holes were supposedly built according to USGA specs and the 9 holes were just… built. Upon close inspection, I could see that the sand material on the par-3 course were of coarser sand and pretty non-standard. Of course, when dry season comes and there were two days of no irrigation; the par-3 course would have dry patches.

So, the million-dollar question; should you use the USGA method or the California method or the hybrid method for your golf course reconstruction? And that sir/lady, would fall under the “time to ask the real expert” category.

Posted in Golf club, Golf Course, Golf Course Superintendents, Greens | Leave a Comment »

Taiping Golf Resort

Posted by mynormas on September 9, 2013

Have you been to Taiping Golf Resort recently? No? You should. The place was formerly known as Bukit Jana Golf and Country Club.

A friend who had just joined Taiping Golf Resort asked me to come over for a visit. As I was in the area visiting a client last week, I dropped by. Having consulted two other golf clubs in the area and trained in one other; I was expecting more of same.

The picture doesn't do it justice. Do go there to judge for yourself.

The picture doesn’t do it justice. Do go there to judge for yourself.

Surprise, surprise. Taiping Golf Resort could put many Klang Valley clubs to shame. The greens are firm and fast. They’re also green. And if you think that is a ‘given’ you need to visit a lot more golf clubs. Or perhaps, I see beyond the colour and look at the health of the green. In any case, the Course Superintendent, one Mr. Huzaine is a firm believer in grooming the greens; a practice which escapes most Malaysian Superintendents.

Get this: he has four walk-behinds for 19 greens (one practice green); two of which are antiquated and have the floating heads designed for undulating greens. This machine has a narrower width of cut than usual and this means his workers has to walk more to cut a green compared to a normal 22-inch wide walk-behinds.

The fairways and roughs are neat and well-maintained. He has one tractor-towed, ground-driven three-gang fairway mower (I was told it used to be five-gang) and one 72-inch rotary rough mower.

Another surprise is that few Klang Valley golfers know about Taiping Golf Resort. It has a comfortable hotel, a decent clubhouse and is just outside of Taiping town. Its about 10-15 minutes away from the North-South highway. By the way, Taiping Golf Resort was formerly known as Bukit Jana Golf and Country Club.

Not many clubs can boast Tifdwarf this tight with a budget that tight...

Not many clubs can boast Tifdwarf this tight with a budget that tight…

TGR has challenging undulating greens, wide but long fairways, tricky dog-legs and well-maintained roughs. Its pretty good for weekend golfers and even those who are looking for something new. The bunkers? You have got to see them. I saw one big deep bunker and a few long ones. I wonder who designed this course. Anybody know?

I’d like to congratulate En. Huzaine and En. Basri for a job well done.

Posted in Golf club, Golf Course, Golf Course Superintendents, Padang Golf, Uncategorized | 2 Comments »

Greens Improvement (kau ada?)

Posted by mynormas on August 16, 2013

Big change - God willing

In 5 months

These pictures show 3 greens now and 6 months prior me becoming their consultant.

Last March a club called and asked for help in improving their greens. I visited the club today (August) and the boss and committee chairman were happy.

I told them in March I could try – God willing – to make some changes. I proposed that I come by once a month to check and give them a schedule on what to do for the next one month. They are of course, not really interested if all I were to do is to recommend some magic formula or machinery which they won’t need a consultant for; they can get many suppliers to give them free advice on that.

In fact, just a couple of months before that they had already spent on a few hundred thousands of ringgit to buy machinery – one of which is sitting idle in the workshop because it was too big for them.

What they want was advice on how to improve the greens without having to reconstruct and/or spend too much money. Actually, they thought they’re paying me too much and don’t want to pay for anything else at all.

The Course Supervisor was friendly but defensive. They had a manager in March but he left in April and they have not replaced him to date.

They agreed to my fee (which, considering the small size of the club, did surprise me a bit) but they wanted something extra. They want a PowerPoint Presentation for the Big Boss every time I visit. Once a month? For the fee I charge? Of course I said “yes”.

So once a month I would spend a day going round with the Supervisor, prepare a presentation that night and first thing the next day, do a presentation for Dato’. He was a rags-to-riches businessman who spoke little English so I had to speak plainly with no jargon.

The Supervisor eventually was quite supportive of me because he can see that I was always on his side by giving him credit for whatever good that happened on the course. He also saw that I not only told him what to do and how; but I also told him the whys and the alternatives. I also did not pushed any chemicals or fertilizers on him. I gave him the specs and formulation and he found them himself.

When I met Dato’ today I was imagining that my contract was going to be shortened since I had already met the challenges posed earlier (I need to relook at that escape clause in my agreement); but surprisingly, he asked me to come more often (like, twice a week?!) so that I can help him with the overall management!

That’s nice of him. But I probably will turn that down. Enough club management for me. I love improving greens and managing grass. People and members? Not so much.

Mar to Aug

Mar to Aug

Not just these 3 greens; all greens there show improvement.

Not just these 3 greens; all greens there show improvement.

Posted in Golf club, Golf Course, Golf Course Superintendents, Greens, Maintenance, Padang Golf | 2 Comments »

Cutting grass

Posted by mynormas on May 31, 2013

Jika alasan anda ialah kecerunan; cuba cari mesin "hover mower"

Jika alasan anda ialah kecerunan; cuba cari mesin “hover mower”

The recent case of a child injured by flying debris gave me the impetus to write this letter. I see a lot of people  – from local authorities to homeowners to football associations  – planting grass but the most common method used to cut the grass is by using the backpack mower called the  ‘brush-cutter’; ‘bush-cutter’; ‘whipper-snapper’ or even the ‘helicopter’.

This machine is favoured because it is cheap, portable, simple to use and require almost no maintenance. When the blades are changed to nylon strings heads, there is one added advantage: there is no need for sharpening.

A few observations about this “brush-cutter”:

  1. The business end of this machine consists of naked rotating blades or nylon strings.  These blades/strings would turn at high speed to cut the grass by impact. Needless to say the same impact would fling stones, pebbles, sand particles and other debris on the ground at high speed towards the operator and those around him or her. Its made worse when the operator rests the strings on the ground.

    The nylon string head of a brush-cutter

    The nylon string head of a brush-cutter

  2. Due to the weight and vibration of this machine only the tough and hardy are willing to operate it for long periods. Hence we see this work being ‘monopolized’ by foreign employees. If we really want to reduce our dependency on foreign workers, lets reduce our dependency on this machine first, at least in this context.
  3. This also has the effect of keeping turfgrass and landscape maintenance in the realm of labourers or part-time odd-job workers. This would negate the efforts of the efforts of the Youth and Sports Ministry – among others – that for the past few years has been working on a syllabus to train youths in landscape, stadium and golf course maintenance with the intention of turning this into a career.
  4. In the hands of the untrained – or the tired – operator, the tendency is to rest the blades or the strings on the grass.  This would cause a very low height of cut (think: ground height) Grass needs leaf to do photosynthesis to produce food and cutting at low heights just removes too much leaves. There is a “rule of thumb” of not cutting more than one-third of the grass when mowing. No way can the “brush cutter” maintain a consistent mowing height of one-third of anything.

I call on everyone who has authority over grass cutting (and that includes homeowners) to stop or limit the use of these machines. Homeowners should consider buying their own electric grass mowers (available in most hypermarkets). Local authorities, building and golf course owners should consider renovating their turfed areas so that its more accessible to ride-on mowers. Architects too must design turfed areas with ride-on machines in mind or look at  alternatives other than grass for example ground-covers, wild flowers, weeping lovegrass, pebbles or even artificial turf.

Homeowners should mow their grasses more often than the occasional time when the grass cutter knocks on your gate when he sees your grass long. The grass Malaysians call Carpet grass grows very quickly and should be mown as often as at least once a week. Petrol engined mowers are high maintenance so do consider an electric or ground-driven mowers.

Many land owners, football associations, golf courses and even homeowners dream of striping their grass. This can never be achieved with “brush cutters”. And no; contrary to popular belief, you don’t need golf course priced machinery to stripe your grass, any mower with a heavy roller behind it (and this can be modified with a metal or GI pipe) will stripe a field with enough discipline on the part of the operator.

With a brush cutter? All you need is a sneezy operator and you can kiss your beloved grass goodbye.

These poor grass has been mown with a brush cutter - maybe the operator has the flu.

These poor grass has been mown with a brush cutter – maybe the operator has the flu.

Posted in Fields, Golf Course, Landscape, Lanskap, Padang Golf, Rumput, Rumput halaman rumah, Rumput secara am, Taman | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Greens Improvement

Posted by mynormas on April 29, 2013

image

This is green 18 at Kinrara Golf Club. It usually doesn’t look like this.
Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Golf Course, Golf Course Superintendents, Greens, Padang Golf | Tagged: , , | 6 Comments »

Algae on golf greens

Posted by mynormas on January 2, 2013

In the context of Malaysian weather where heavy and frequent rain is the norm, plus with poorly or compacted greens, shade from surrounding trees; algae is quite common.I found this slideshare article that is very informative and thought that I should share it.

Be advised that even though the title is about golf greens, much of the info are also applicable to other parts of turfed areas (yes your lawn too madam)

If you think most of the slides’ contents are too ‘academic’ jump straight to slide number 53, though you might be searching backwards for background info but at least you know what you are looking for is what you need to know.

This is the first time I am doing this so I hope this turns out alright…

Posted in Fields, Golf club, Golf Course, Golf Course Superintendents, Greens, Padang, Padang Golf, Rumput, Rumput halaman rumah | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

Penjagaan rumput monsun

Posted by mynormas on November 2, 2012

I’ll be talking about turfgrass maintenance during the rainy season. And I define ‘rainy season’ differently than a ‘rainy spell’. A rainy season is not unexpected,it usually happens at the same time every year whereas a rainy spell is a prolonged period of heavy rainfall occuring almost daily unexpectedly. Not planning for the rainy season is, in my opinion; unforgivable. So how do we plan for the rainy season – in terms of turfgrass management? What should we do? When? Lets share.

Saya dah lama tidak update this website. I apologize. There’s a lot of questions posted here and emailed to me yang belum di jawab. Saya minta maaf.

Apakah langkah penjagaan rumput yang perlu diambil di  waktu musim hujan? Mari kita berkongsi.

1. Fertilizing. Penggunaan baja di musim hujan akan menyebabkan baja larut dan lesap ke dalam sistem saliran yg menyebabkan pembaziran dan pencemaran air. Elakkan menggunakan baja kimia biasa ketika dah tahu hujan lebat setap hari. Try slow release in small quantities or even foliar fertilizer but more frequently.

2. Pesticide use. Menggunakan racun makhluk perosak juga boleh menyebabkan pencemaran di tambah pula air dalam tanah atau air hujan boleh mencairkan racun dan menyebabkan kelalian pest kepada racun. Try using systemic pesticides.

3. Wetting agent. Memang di luar dugaan dan counter intuitive “Kenapa nak guna wetting agent waktu dah basah giler?” Kebanyakkan wetting agent, terutamanya wetting agent generasi kedua (tanya supplier, klau dia tak tau, tanya supplier lain) akan menjadikan tanah lebih ‘mesra-air’ dan memudahkan ia masuk ke dalam tanah. Gunakan ia secara berterusan dari musim kering hinggalah ke musim hujan.

4. Aeration. Kerja hollow-tine is very good but to do it during the rainy season would make it a bad decision. Try spiking or slicing. Do often. Ia akan membantu memecahkan algae dan/atau permukaan keras supaya air masuk ke bawah.

Slicing the field

5. Vertical-cutting. Not really a good idea to do any major dethatching work. But grooming or light dethatching: excellent.

6. Mowing. Potong kenalah potong rumput. Jangan biarkan rumput terlalu panjang kerana alasan tak boleh masuk mesin; gunakan manpower with brush-cutters or push mowers. Jika terlalu lama tidak di potong, ia akan menggalakkan rumput liar membiak dan juga menyebabkan kita memotong terlalu banyak daun bila kita dah boleh masuk mesin nanti. Lepas potong, jangan biar sampah rumput bertaburan untuk di larikan oleh air hujan! Ia akan menjadikan tanah tidak rata dan menjadi masalah di masa akan datang.

7. Growth regulator:  Ia sangat membantu di waktu ini kerana ia melambatkan rumput tumbuh jadi jika kita ada masalah padang atau fairway yang terlalu lecak dan tak boleh potong, sembur dengan Primo (takde jenama lain di Malaysia) supaya kita tidak ada tekanan memotong sewaktu hujan tengah lebat.

8. Tree pruning: Kurangkan dahan pokok yang ada risiko untuk patah dan sekaligus akan mengurangkan daun yang gugur dan terpaksa di kutip.

9. Rubbish and leave collection. Kutip sampah, daun atau clipping yang akan menyumbat longkang dan menjadi masalah di masa akan datang.

10. Drain out the water. Cuba pastikan air tidak bertakung terlalu lama. Buat longkang sementara atau tebuk tanah supaya air mengalir.

11. Jika kawasan anda mempunyai selut (contohnya dalam bunker) buang lapisan selut itu supaya ia tidak menutup permukaan tanah dan air tidak mengalir.

 

Jika anda mendapati ada tempat yang mempunyai masalah air tidak mengalir atau lecak; tandakan tempat itu di atas peta dan buat rancangan untuk membuat longkang bawah tanah, atau apa cara pun supaya masalah yang sama tidak berulang. Saya dapati, pembetulan dan tindakan jangka masa panjang adalah lebih berkesan dari kerja sementara yang di buat berulang kali.

Selamat mencuba!
Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Fields, Golf club, Golf Course, Greens, Rumput | 4 Comments »

Zoysia green.

Posted by mynormas on September 3, 2012

image

As I said, its the first time I used this app. Just tilt your head to the right to see the image.

My first ever Zoysia green (and my first ever posting with this app). It was an unused and un maintained roundabout behind the club kitchen and the cooks were dumping their old equipment on it! One pro tournament at the club wanted a practice green and that was the only option available. They gave me two weeks notice to get it done. Managed to do it just in time and maintained it as a green ever since. It may be the ‘wrong grass’ but it sure is easier to maintain than the greens here that have many different types of grasses.

Posted in Golf Course, Golf Course Superintendents, Greens, Maintenance, Padang, Padang Golf | Tagged: , | 1 Comment »