This site is intended to share information relating to the management of the golf course conditioning and quality of Northmoor Country Club and the art, the science, and the factors that influence those conditions. Please visit as often as possible.





Friday, February 11, 2011

What Happens Under All That Snow

While snow can appear as a beautiful and calm blanket for a golf course during the winter month, undesirable things can be happening underneath. In the basic of terms, turf can survive under snow for extended periods but if there is an ice layer under the snow then the turf can only survive for a certain amount of time. While snow affords oxygen availability to the turfgrass plant, an ice layer prevents oxygen to get to the turf.

Each different species of turfgrass has its own specific threshold of tolerance before damage occurs to the plant under ice. For this reason sometimes drastic measures have to be initiated to protect the turf, even during the frozen winter when golfers are thousands of miles away from Chicago in the warmer climates. In the event that you would like to learn more about the effects of snow and ice damage to turf, please refer to the following website and article.

http://www.usga.org/course_care/regional_updates/regional_reports/midatlantic/What-Is-

Northmoor Country Club golf course under snow
The photo below is of Microdochium patch, a winter turfgrass disease.
We want to avoid this at all costs. It occurs under extended periods of ice and snow.
Numerous diseases can occur under the snow and ice
that can affect the appearance and playability of the
golf course the following spring.

The photo below shows the effects of ice damage in a shaded area on a golf course.
More winter and ice damage on a course in Virginia.
The photo below is of a 1 inch ice layer on our green at NCC.
Our staff removed the snow layer with a sand machine blade
so that we could get to the ice layer.

Once the snow was removed from the surface of the green
we shattered the ice layer with the aerifyer machine tines.
This allowed air and sunlight to get to the grass plant.
The surface of the green was cleared of ice for turfgrass protection & survival.









Thursday, February 3, 2011

The Storm

Below are some photos of the snow accumulations at the club following the recent storm.

The Golf Course Operations staff clears the main driveway
The entry to the men's locker room was difted in with snow.

A view of the back of the clubhouse

The golf course is blanketed with a deep layer of snow.

There are 3 and 4 foot drifts of snow covering our fuel tanks
The Golf Course Operations staff braves the cold to clear the driveway
The cart barn is surrounded by heavy snow drifts