Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Mid March Update

With the recent trend towards warmer temperatures, the grass has started to grow.  With that, we have removed all of the green covers and mowed the greens for the first time this year.  Even though we have begun mowing, it will be some time before the greens are in tournament condition.  Before the end of this month, we will aerify the greens and topdress them heavily with sand.  Only after we have finished aerfifying, can we begin to condition the greens for the season.
First mowing of greens in 2015
Notice the height difference between cut and uncut.
Mowing #7 green after the cover was removed.
Notice the difference from the turf that was covered and the turf that was not covered.
On another note, with good weather, we should finish the rock wall behind #2 green this week.  I am certain everyone will be pleased with the new look.  The staff always amazes me as they just keep getting better with their stone work.  As soon as we finish with #2, we will start a similar rock wall at #10 tee.
HFCC staff building the rock wall behind #2 green.
#2 rock nearly completed.
 Now that the weather has improved, we have begun to replace the large culvert that extends across #5 fairway.  While our staff is doing the detail work, Mountain Hardscapes is doing the heavy lifting, digging, removing the old pipe, and installing the new one.  I expect them to be competed sometime next week.
Sod removal on #5 fairway to make room for installing a new culvert.
#5 fairway before culvert installation.
 

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Thank You!

Thank you to everyone who has contacted and congratulated me on my TurfNet Superintendent of the Year award.  Its really an honor and I am humbled by it all.  After coming back to work from the Golf Industry Show, my staff surprised me with a little appreciation of their own.  I am every bit honored by their support as I am by my SOTY award as I could not have done it without them.  Thanks guys!
 

Signed by the HFCC maintenance staff.

Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Superintendent of the Year Honors!

Fred Gehrisch, CGCS, is 2014 Superintendent of the Year


When it comes to managing golf courses, Fred Gehrisch, CGCS, sees the big picture, but it's the little things he does that attract so much attention.
 
"Fred Gehrisch not only knows how to grow grass and manage a crew and a budget, but is also very attuned to the club members, and probably is the staff member who does the best job of seeing that members have reason to be proud of the club," said Charles Sausman, a member at Highlands Falls Country Club in Highlands, North Carolina, where Gehrisch has been superintendent 16 years.
 
Whether it is maintaining the golf course, taking on a civic-improvement project or picking up random trash on the property, doing whatever it takes to improve the customer experience for members has become Gehrisch's trademark.
 
"We all get dirty here," Gehrisch said. "There's no such thing as 'it's not my job' here. Picking up a wrapper on the floor is just as much my responsibility as someone who works in the clubhouse."
 
On Feb. 26, Gehrisch was named the winner of the 2014 TurfNet Superintendent of the Year Award, presented by Syngenta.
 
He was chosen by a panel of judges from a field of 10 finalists that included Nelson Caron of The Ford Plantation in Richmond Hill, Georgia, the late Paul Colleran of Aldarra Golf Club in Sammamish, Washington, Jorge Croda of Southern Oaks Golf Club in Burleson, Texas, Jim Ferrin of Timber Creek and Sierra Pines Golf Courses in Roseville, California, Mark Hoban of Rivermont Country Club in John's Creek, Georgia, Joel Kachmarek of Tacoma (Washington) Country and Golf Club, Paul Latshaw of Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio, Jim Roney of Saucon Valley Country Club in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania and Eric Wygant of Shannopin Country Club in Pittsburgh.
 

Throughout his career, Gehrisch, 45, has undertaken several civic-improvement projects that help improve quality of life for residents of Highlands and portray the club in a positive public light. Recently, he won the praises of his members for helping spearhead a project to convert an otherwise forgotten meeting room in the clubhouse into a museum dedicated to the history of the club and architect of the golf course, the late Joe Lee.
 
The project culminated with a golf tournament in Lee's honor and a celebration that included a host of dignitaries including Lee's widow. The Joe Lee room includes photographs, trophies and other memorabilia that walk members through the history of the 50-plus-year-old club and connect some long-forgotten dots.
 
For many years, Gehrisch, a graduate of Ohio State University, has had a love for tackling projects outside the normal realm of his superintendent duties, and has been fortunate to have a membership that understands his passion.
 

Highlands is an upscale mountain community in western North Carolina, and many of the club's members maintain second homes there. Among the area's more well-heeled residents, they also have a knack for volunteer work and giving back to the community, and appreciate the same from Gehrisch.
 
To that end, Gehrisch has planted trees throughout Highlands for the city, cleared a downtown lot to make room for a municipal park, managed hemlocks for the town's land trust, repaired its hiking trails, cleared debris so a local animal shelter could expand its operations, cuts firewood for the town to distribute to needy families, builds doghouses for a local charity.
 
"Part of the job here is to promote the image of the club," Gehrisch said. "In a small town, little things can go a long way, especially our community projects."