New Zealand greenkeepers return
New Zealand greenkeepers return: Mowers started up for the first time in three weeks on Tuesday at many of New Zealand’s 400 golf courses.
Greenkeepers returned “just in time”, with some facing overgrown roughs and disease encroaching on the greens.
The Government gave the all-clear for golf course maintenance to resume, following lobbying from those in the golfing community. The stipulation from the Ministry of Primary Industries, which applies to bowling and croquet greens and nurseries, is that the maintenance must be urgent.
The upkeep of golf courses is a daily task, and if maintenance were delayed further, it could have a million-dollar impact, said Remuera golf club superintendent and NZ Golf Superintendents Association board member Spencer Cooper.
“We’ve got back to work just in time. It’s essential we maintain the properties so we’ve got something to go back to,” he said.
“Delaying… there would be tens of millions of dollars worth of damage.
“A lot of golf courses wouldn’t survive and it would result in a lot of people losing their jobs unncessarily.”
Cooper arrived on Tuesday to find “really nasty” fungal disease starting to appear on the greens. Some diseases can spread “extremely quickly” and wipe out entire greens within 48 to 72 hours.
“For the golf courses that do financially survive, the damage could be quite severe which would cost a lot of money to repair,” he said.
“It would keep the golf courses that do survive closed for longer and it would take longer for people to get back to playing golf.”
Golf is one of the most popular sports in the country, with more than half a million players picking up the golf clubs in the last 12 months.
Cooper’s club has a membership of 1600, and has more than 60,000 rounds of golf per year.
While Cooper is sceptical about the sport resuming in the next few weeks, he said golf offers an opportunity for exercise while in isolation.
“I believe people can go and play golf, in pretty much isolation, out in nature, get a bit of exercise, getting a bit of sunshine, without coming across too many other people,” he said.
“If we do it properly we believe we’re one of the few sports that can really be viable when others can’t…[and] there’s a huge mental health benefit.”
For now, he and his team are happy to be out on the course, also working on their mental health.
“This something extremely therapeutic about mowing grass and the smell of it… it was amazing,” he laughed.
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