Tuesday, February 19, 2013

H2B Visa Program

Every year Squire Creek Grounds submits application for visa workers.  This fulfills our need for seasonal labor.  For us, the visa guys arrive in February or March and depart for their homeland in December.  Needless to say, the crew just arrived and is getting acquainted with their surrounding.  This year we received 25 visas, that will be working in different areas inside the grounds department;

1 at clubhouse grounds
1 roadways
2 orchards of Squire Creek
5  landscaping
16 golf course

We have plenty of work for these guys this spring, we will be landscaping the guest cottages and planting all the roadways, entrances and parks in the orchards.  We look forward to the year to come.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Deja vu

Here we are, it is August 8th and it is 100 degrees.  We have missed all the rain in the area the last few days and are praying for a good rain in the near future.  It is playing out exactly like last year, hot and dry.  As we stand now our main treatment pond is out of water, we are beginning to pull water from across the road.  Hopefully over the next few weeks we will get some rain to soak into the dry spots.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Welcome Winter

Winter has finally arrived bringing cold temperatures that are driving the bermuda grass into dormancy. The roughs are almost completely dormant while the short grasses are still holding a little color.

In the grounds department this winter, we are operating with the smallest crew in our history, 11 people. That includes 2 managers, 2 mechanics, and 7 on the crew. This number is down significantly from the past when we would staff 20 guys in the winter. We are trying to staff strong from March -November when our season is busy, then really back off when our play drops.

The winter tasks of this eleven man crew includes:

  • Blowing greens
  • Check bunkers
  • Clubhouse and tennis maintenance
  • Blow and clean up leaves
  • Spraying for winter weeds
  • Irrigation and drainage projects
  • Preventative maintenance of equipment
  • Grinding of reels for the mowers
  • Hydrojecting of greens
  • Mowing grass if needed
  • Filling divots on driving range tees
  • Cleaning of shop and equipment
  • And other miscellaneous tasks

We thank everyone for another great year and look forward to the year to come.

Have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year

Nick Cauley and the Grounds Staff

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Grooming the Greens


topdressed green


groomer in action

this is what it looks like after the groomer has passed

It seems summer is coming to an end and fall is right around the corner. The temperatures and sun angle have changed, so the days are becoming more comfortable instead of miserable. Yesterday we groomed the greens for the last time this year. This was a process we did every Monday to help control surface grain and to work sand into the turf canopy.
The process goes like this:
  1. topdress
  2. groom
  3. brush with mechanical broom
  4. roll

  5. mow

  6. gypsum application

We have changed the order of this process since the first of the summer. Now we brush and roll before the mowers. We find that this makes the surface a little firmer so the mowers do not dig in and cause damage to the turf.







Monday, August 16, 2010

Tee Box Contamination and Renovation



The lime colored grass is zoysia, which came from the 10 acres of zoysia we have planted through out the golf course. the rest of the grass on this tee is 419 from San Antonio



we sod cut then removed the grass and organic matter


tee box being raked out and sprigged, the sprigs were cut from another spot on the golf course that consisted of a pure stand of turf, the white pipe is temporary irrigation that was installed for watering through out the day, we had to water the sprigs a bout 6 times a day to keep them moist



After 3 weeks of growing, looks pretty good, the grass is starting to knit together




After 3 weeks, about 80% coverage, to this point these tee boxes have received 1lb of nitrogen a week to assist them in growing over

When Squire Creek was built earlier this decade everything was sodded, except for the greens. The turf of choice was 419 bermudagrass, and most of this was brought in from Tifton, Georgia. The tees however are different story, the grass on those were brought in from San Antonio, Texas.
Since the tees have a sand base they used washed sod. Washed sod is where the soil is removed from the sod to create a bare root product. This also is used to eliminate sod to soil incompatibilities, help the sod knit to the soil faster, and reduce shipping costs.
When you use a turf from two different fields there are going to be some differences and it can present contamination problems. This is why we have chosen to re-sprig 4 of our tees.

If all goes well the tees should be open for the D-Cup and we may choose a few more to do next year.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

The Army has Arrived


single worm down in the grass on #4




several armyworms in grass hanging from leaves


damage in grass on #9, coming out of tree


The armyworm has arrived at Squire Creek and all other nearby pastures. Their eggs are deposited on trees, flagpoles, and grass in groups of 100 or more. The eggs hatch into worms in 2-10 days. The larval body is dull black with several stripes alongside the body. There is a distinct inverted light-colored Y on the front of the head.During there growth cycle they curl up in leaf sheaths, suspend themselves from plants by threads, or crawl about on the ground. Sometimes a large number of larvae may suddenly appear moving across a golf course like an army, hints the name armyworm. When this occurs, large areas will simply disappear overnight, leaving only the thatch, crown, and root system behind. In our area, the fall armyworm is the most destructive turf insect we encounter, especially to bermudagrass.

We have several other grass types in the developement including; centipede, st. augustine, and zoysia. The armyworm does not seem to affect these grasses.

Monday, August 9, 2010

Stormy Weather


Bunker #6 greenside after last Friday's rain


#3 greenside bunker with new sand, I believe that rain was as back as it can get, as you can see this bunker could be raked out, the question is will this sand percolate like this in 3 years?

Lightening strike 4inch irrigation pipe at driving range


the pipe the lightening struck


the pipe repaired with 4inch pipe and 4inch knock-on,
if you look closely you can see red and yellow cables under the pipe, these hopefully were not affected by the lightening

The storms late last week brought much needed rain to our area. We ended up getting .75inch on Wednesday, .25inch on Thursday, and 3.5inch on Friday. The rain we received on Friday was a flash flood type downpour with a lot of lightening. When we receive this amount of lightening we run the risk of it striking trees, irrigation lines, and irrigation cables.

We are now in the process of picking up after the storm. If we do not get any more bad weather we will hopefully be back to normal on Wednesday.