Welcome

Welcome, this site will be devoted to providing information about the ongoing maintenance issues that take place at The Creek Club . As this site is developed, content will be added that demonstrates things that range from course care to comprehensive details about agronomic procedures. I hope that this will become a useful tool in communicating things that are taking place on the golf course. I will try to use the blog to explain how and why we do some of the things we do on the golf course.




Friday, April 27, 2012

An Even Bigger Easy: The Creek Club

An Even Bigger Easy: The Creek Club


Next Stop: Crazyville. Photo by Joann Dost.
In an era when golf course architects seem to take great pride in their ability to make our game ever more difficult (thanks, Jack!), and to punish us in increasingly cruel and inventive ways for even slightly mis-hit shots, architect Jim Engh has taken the opposite tact.  And golfers should love him for it.  I’d give him a hug right now if he was in front of me.
Engh has figured out what nobody else in golf seems to understand: that scoring well– and even going unreprimanded for less than perfect shots– just makes golf more fun.  Engh’s brilliant Creek Club at Reynolds Plantation leaves no mediocre shot unrewarded and even truly terrible golfers can climb up to the clubhouse from the eighteenth green (or at least from one of them– Engh designed three final greens that are used on alternate days) feeling great about their round.  And I just can’t think of a single thing wrong with that.  There’s also nothing wrong with a really good player shooting a 68 or a 69.
When the Golf Road Warriors show up at this private club that persistent golfers can usually still find a way to get on (although you have to play in the company of a member), the starter tells us a bit about the course awaiting us: that no hazards lurk behind the greens, for example, and that we’ll find this layout just a little different from most courses we’ve ever played.  He says this with a kind of smirk, and in fact everyone we’ve met all week who plays here– including many members– says the course is “different” in the same way they’d describe a distant uncle who’s just not quite right in the head.  I can only say in response that not only don’t they have anything to apologize for, but they should be bragging haughtily about this rare jewel that they have almost entirely to themselves.  In closing, the starter also tells us not the pin position but the green position on number eighteen– it’s the middle one today.
In inventing a clever layout that tends to bump balls back toward fairways and nudge them away from hazards and kicks them in slow circles toward the pins up around the greens, Engh also created golf holes of intense visual beauty.  From the first look at the course and its Zoysia fairways from the first tee Creek Club impresses with a downhill shot across a creek and past two sentry trees that lend definition.  After a solid drive I hit two very mediocre shots (the first lands high and off line but rolls down another forty yards toward the hole, the next barely makes it back across the creek and touches down way short  and left of the green but kicks and rolls up toward the pin) on the 578-yard par five first hole, and yet find myself with a 15-foot birdie putt, and I am liking this already.  Looking up at the pin sheet on the approach I note that you don’t often see pin positions of minus 25 and minus 28 feet.

To Jim Engh: We LOVE you, man! Photo by Joann Dost.
After the second hole I’m still rusty but find that not having hit a good shot yet I’m still at even par for the starting pair– it’s just a great idea that’s so counter-intuitive to every overly difficult course I’ve ever played.  I revel in this balancing of golf karma that finally rewards bad shots whereas so many other courses tend to punish even good ones.  In a way Engh’s work here reminds me of David Kidd’s designs at The Castle Course in St. Andrews and Tetherow in Central Oregon, except in an opposite way– whereas Kidd’s earthworks tend to move the ball mostly away from your target unless you choose exactly the right hump or curl and hit in the precise way the design demands, Engh seems to have pre-figured virtually every off-line shot a golfer could hit and created features that usher such shots back into the most playable position possible.
Peter Kessler and I are playing the course in the company of golf professional Mike Davenport, who makes two birdies in the first four holes and must be starting to feel confident, as he actually hits his drive on number five onto the middle of a narrow bridge and we watch it bounce toward an alternate fairway– a brilliant maneuver that most pros wouldn’t even attempt.
By number six I recognize that not only are many of the greens bowl-shaped, but they contain multiple bowls that gather shots and circle them back toward the various cupping areas.  One of these is so steep and fast that Kessler– to our great amusement– is forced to chase after his cigar as it rolls down a hill.  It’s the quickest I’ve ever seen him move.
One shot demand that Engh does require is a high loft to many of the greens, which sit uphill behind various crazy humps and bumps.  But these are crafted so beautifully that each hole is an individual artwork of design elements– or several artworks, actually, as tee shots are framed beautifully by trees and creeks, and green complexes are photographic compositions of hummocks and bunkers (that mostly don’t even come into play) and rolling, curvy lines.
Number twelve is one of my favorites all day– a risk-reward shot where the risk is much less than the reward.  Golfers can choose between two fairways, but the more difficult one only requires a 210-yard carry to reach.  Streams, lakes, and pot bunkers converge in the center of the hole and the two fairways S-curve gracefully through and over and around them.  Possibly the craziest hole on the routing comes at thirteen– it’s a par three over water with a green that wraps 60 yards in the perfect shape of a croissant, where the pin could be hidden completely out of site at the back behind steep mounds.  Everything drains down from raised hills toward the green like in a watershed collecting rain from miles around.


Finishing Hole, Green #1. Photo by Joann Dost.
On sixteen– a short par four with the green perched way up above gumdrop mounding– I hit my best shot of the day, though Mike Davenport tells me I’m a bit long.  But when we get up to the green and I’m looking for my ball he points silently toward the hole.  We’ve been told that the Creek Club awards a surprising number of birdies, eagles, and holes-in-ones, and as promised, my own personal eagle has landed here.
An un-exemplary display of golf nets me an 81 for the day and a long-awaited victory over Kessler, who is nowhere near as lucky as I am.  He’s forced to hand over twenty dollars at the lunch table– it’s the first time we’ve played for money because I told him I needed greater motivation than simply a running tally of lifelong wins and losses to be at my most competitive.  It works as I knew it would, except Kessler borrows back ten bucks at the airport later in the day to tip the skycaps.


Thinking Back to When the Creek Club Opened and Jim Engh Heard Some Chirping

Thinking Back to When the Creek Club Opened and Jim Engh Heard Some Chirping



 To begin with, Jim Engh’s design of The Creek Club at Reynolds Plantation can only be understood in light of the fact that Reynolds had a bunch of other golf courses sprinkled about the acreage, pleasing members and earning accolades, when Engh arrived to work his corner of the property. Just as the Winged Foot members of a century ago told  A.W. Tillinghast, “Build us a man-sized course,” the leadership at Reynolds asked Engh for something new, novel, stimulating and even stunning.
Engh had some license, in other words. The situation is comparable to that of Landmark Land Company decades ago, wherein Landmark CEO Gerald Barton told Pete Dye to build a super-intimidating PGA West because, as Barton nonchalantly said, “It would attract national attention for being a brutally hard course, and after our guests took their beating from it, we could set them up with tee times the next day on any of our many playable and easily
enjoyable courses.”
What we experienced on the final day of Golf Road Warriors trip was Jim Engh’s Old World-New Age response to the tumbling, pine-topped parcel they gave him. It’s a hair-raising spectacle of split fairways, multiple greens and astonishing little villages of bunkers and mounding. People shook their heads at first, self-styled purists, especially. This five-year-old stem-winder of a golf course is widely admired now, funky bounces and all. The assignment was to break free of convention, and not every course designer has the chops or the cajones to do that.
Engh shaped and shimmied this golf course to a high level of artistry. He sent it flying through the woodland and whipping around corners in a series of stirring surprises. There is more a chutes-and-ladders look to the fairway contours than your ball will actually experience. Up at the greensites, in many cases,  C.B. MacDonald’s imported concept of the Punchbowl  is explored in vivid and even dizzying detail. Even if you don’t talk to your ball while it’s in the air, you can deliver entire speeches to it as it skips and rolls along the 3D complexity of sideslopes, hollows, bays and bumps.
And all through the rhythm of the routing are the pretty creeks—natural, unaltered, never piped and covered, just where Engh found them. The entire effect is rousing, inspiring and gratifying.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

GCM Syringing bentgrass Greens

It is Masters Week and the greens look great!  However with 4th hottest spring on record the soil temps are close to what we see in May. The summer temps and humidity are right around the corner.   Soon the staff will be out hand watering and syringing in order to keep bentgrass greens healthy throughout summer. Below is a good link about syringing and why we do it so often when battling the summer heat.

 GCM July 1996 - Syringing