Sod Scarcity Slows GA
Courses’
Recovery from Tough
Winter
Hartwell, GA - Spring may have sprung but many
Georgia golf courses are struggling to shake the after affects of a severe
winter. Sustained periods of bitter cold caused varied degrees of turf loss at
the vast majority of the state’s nearly 400 courses.
Golf course superintendents would normally replace the
dead grass with healthy sod but sod is in critically short supply, thanks in no
small part to the recession. As a result, golfers are emerging from hibernation
to find straw-colored blotches littering their fairways and green
surrounds.
“It really has been a perfect storm,” says Ken Mangum,
certified golf course superintendent at Atlanta Athletic Club in Johns Creek,
which hosts the U.S. Amateur Championship in August.
A significant number of sod farms in the Southeast closed
during the recession and most others reduced their acreage. For those survivors,
golf is generally a sideline behind demand from the commercial and residential
sectors. As the economy recovered and construction resumed, golf’s supply was
already being squeezed.
“But we also had cool, cloudy and wet conditions last
summer that extended into the fall,” Mangum adds. “So a lot of farms weren’t
able to establish new sod after their harvest last year. Now we have all these
golf courses that suffered badly because of the winter. And even if you do find
some sod, good luck trying to secure a truck to deliver it.”
Mangum, who has prepared the golf course for two PGA
Championships and a U.S. Women’s Open at Atlanta Athletic Club, will be inducted
into the Georgia Golf Hall of Fame in January. He says the past winter was the
worst he could recall since 1977 when “we stayed frozen for six weeks straight
and it killed a lot of grass everywhere.”
The most susceptible areas on a course are north facing
slopes, persistently shaded areas and areas with poor drainage.
The good news is that the greens at most facilities came
through mostly unscathed. Bentgrass is relatively cold tolerant and most courses
with warm-season bermudagrass greens now use covers when temperatures plummet.
But on fairways, around the greens and in rough areas which are grassed almost
exclusively with warm-season turf in Georgia, superintendents can do little but
cross their fingers.
Officials from the Georgia Golf Course Superintendents
Association have asked for patience from golfers while their courses recover,
which will happen, eventually. But without sod at the ready, recovery will
require consistently warm temperatures and clear skies with plenty of sunlight.
Sub 50-degree nighttime temperatures, like those experienced this week, do not
help.
“Still, the situation is getting better every day,” Mangum
says, wryly. “It’s just that the days go by too slow.”
Contact: Tenia Workman, Executive Director, Georgia
GCSA (706) 376-3585.
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