Scramble mode for courses
BRYCE ALDERTON
Clear skies for a majority of last week offered golf courses in
Newport-Mesa the chance to wring out the oodles and oodles of
rainwater that had fallen for the first few days of the new year and
give the people who work at these places an opportunity to take a
deep breath and reflect.
The rains took their toll on both environment and the employee.
Excessive amounts of water swept sand out of bunkers and sent trees
falling to the earth while some employees lost wages because of
reduced hours.
While the rain affected each course and country club differently,
one conclusion seemed to be unanimous.
Rarely has there been that much rain in such a short time.
Mesa Verde Country Club received 10 inches of rain in four days
and was closed for nearly a week until golfers returned to the course
last Thursday.
“We lost six trees, three good eucalyptus trees,” Mesa Verde head
professional Tom Sargent said. “It was raining so hard the greens had
sheets of water on them.”
Santa Ana Country Club superintendent Dave Zahrte said 6.15 inches
of rain fell from Jan. 7-10. The super-saturated conditions sent one
large eucalyptus tree tumbling to the earth while torrents of water
flowed throughout various parts of the course, Zahrte said.
Zahrte said it was raining so hard Jan. 10 that he could only see
roughly 30 yards from his office window.
At the storm’s worst, Zahrte, the club’s superintendent since
1977, said that water 3 1/2 feet deep rushed through a trough that
fronts the green on the par-3 sixth hole.
“Water was rising all the way up to the front edge of the green
and [veering] all the way back toward [Santa Ana Avenue],” Zahrte
said. “We have three catch basins, but with that volume of water, you
can’t keep up.
“This is the most amount of rain that has come down in a short
period of time.”
When the sun finally came out, calls began pouring into golf
shops.
Phones rang off the hook in the Costa Mesa Golf & Country Club pro
shop the morning of Jan 12 with golfers on the other line hoping to
secure a tee time, said head professional Brad Booth. Costa Mesa
remained open even during the heaviest rains, but play was sporadic
to say the least.
“Both courses [Los Lagos and Mesa Linda] are going, but it’s wet
underfoot,” said Booth, who added that the conditions were the worst
he’s seen due to rain in his 13 years working at the course. “[Course
conditions] are a D to C-minus. We’ve been pumping water the last 30
hours to get everything open.
“Some days there were 15 [players] and other days there were
five.”
Public courses suffer when the weather turns sour because they
rely on green fees for revenue. Private clubs have dues-paying
members, so the economic impact is lessened.
Booth estimated that the rains cost Costa Mesa $100,000 in
revenue.
“That figure is all-encompass- ing, including green fees, pro shop
sales ... ,” Booth said. “People who are normally full-time are
working 10 to 20 hours a week. Cart [employees] often don’t work when
it rains. They lose their wages because of no business. It creates a
hardship.”
On the course, the saturated grasses made it difficult and nearly
impossible to use machine-driven mowers on the fairways and greens at
several courses until drier weather prevailed at the end of last
week. Crews used hand mowers -- if they mowed at all -- until the
grass dries out a bit more.
Warmer weather for a majority of the past week will hopefully
allow people to return to their jobs and give the much- appreciated
maintenance crews, who deserve supreme kudos for the work they do
year round, time to restore these courses to their usually-plush
state.
The record rainfall, which began picking up steam as early as
mid-December, has sent maintenance crews scrambling to keep courses
in playable condition, said Costa Mesa Golf & Country Club
superintendent Jim Fetterly.
“We haven’t mowed the fairways since the middle of December and we
haven’t cut the greens,” Fetterly said. “That is dangerous because
fungus starts growing and you don’t want to let it grow too high.”
Fetterly said he and his crews have repeatedly pumped water from
bunkers and re-filled traps with sand following each passing storm.
“It is frustrating because we find ourselves doing it again and
again,” Fetterly said.
But Fetterly said the benefits outweigh the immediate problems.
“Rain is always good in the long run,” he said. “It flushes things
out. There is nothing we can do to the golf course to re-create what
mother nature can do for us.
“If we have a dry year, we spend more money on fertilizers,
pesticides and water. If we get a wet year, we don’t spend as much
[on those items], but revenue drops. It’s a balance.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.