Tuesday, October 31, 2017

The Inaugural Northwest Golf Course Superintendents Association’s Turfgrass Expo

For the last six years, the fall season has always been a crazy traveling time for me. Colorado, Utah, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and the Inland Empire all having their annual meetings and fall conferences in October. It had been discussed several times over the years but three years ago, while sitting in the Peaks & Prairies board meeting in Billings, Dan Tolson, CGCS, and Jason Busch suggested it was time to combine Idaho, Inland Empire and Peaks & Prairies all in one meeting. Of course, in the back of my mind, I was thinking I could hit all meetings in one place and finally find time to make that elusive hunting trip. (Of course, that didn’t work out.) The idea seemed rather daunting, but Executive Director Lori Russell pressed on. As the idea was proposed to each board, the response was a resounding yes, so Lori started the wheels in motion.

The easy part was organizing the education. It wouldn’t be hard to seek out some of the country’s top presenters and invite them to beautiful Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, and to get members from all three chapter to attend. Headlining the event was GCSAA CEO Rhett Evans, Brian Horgan, Ph.D., from the University of Minnesota, Golf Course Architect, David McLay Kidd, Thomas Nikolai, PhD., from Michigan State, and Micah Woods, Ph.D., from the Asian Turfgrass Center in Thailand. The associations knew that if they could draw some of the top presenters, it would draw more to the event. They were right, the total attendance was just shy of 300!

The difficulty would be to find a legitimate way to monetize the event so each chapter would come out in the black. Since some vendors supported all three chapters and some only one, a step program had to be developed. If you were a member of all three chapters you paid more than those that were a member of only two and so on. Although the booth cost was more expensive at this trade show, it made total sense, the vendors realized that it was still cheaper than doing three separate shows.

As a side note, in talking with Lori after this event and learning all that went into the negotiation of the facility, the costs of every little item is sometimes a little mind-blowing. For instance, some may have complained about the chicken lunch, but what they don’t understand is that was one of the more affordable items on the menu at $45 per plate. Coffee doesn’t come cheap at these events either. How does $2400 a day sound? How about that beer at the trade show? It was only $1000 for two kegs! Everything adds up and Lori pulled this thing off single-handedly and did a remarkable job working with the resort to control the costs.
Lori won’t know how the event penciled out for each of the chapters until all the bills have come in. She honestly felt that some of the chapters may take a little hit financially over each hosting their own fall event, but that was communicated up front and each chapter was willing to take that risk. Overall, this was an incredibly successful event, especially in terms of member satisfaction. During the golf outing, members were paired with other members from other chapters which was uncomfortable for some, but by the end of the round they all had an incredible time. Many of the vendors were excited as well. The trade show was packed for three full hours and they were asking if this could become a regular event.

Chances are, this won’t happen every year or even every other year. But with that said, there is a darn good chance this may happen every four or five years. It will all boil down to the venue and whether the costs can be kept affordable. I’ll be keeping my fingers crossed, for sure!

Monday, October 9, 2017

Becoming bee friendly doesn’t just benefit the pollinators

While making site visits around the Northwest this summer, I had the opportunity to see so many great things that superintendents are doing to enhance the environment. When it comes to enhancing pollinator habitat, I saw quite a few great examples of how to get it done. Today, I would like to share some of the ideas that I have found, I hope this blog will inspire others to do the same thing.

First, let me start by asking a simple question: Why should we spend time and energy enhancing pollinator habitat? Here are a few reasons that I have seen and I will try to address each in this blog.
I’m pretty sure that we all understand the implications of the first two bullets so I would like to focus on the latter three and provide some examples how others have exemplified them on their property.

Increased pollinator habitat will help ensure both plant and bee species survival
Our food supply is dependent on pollinators
Pollinator habitat can beautify your property
Creating habitat can create opportunities for community outreach and education
Pollinator habitat can create opportunities for industry advocacy

Nothing can beat a big and blooming stand of wildflowers on a golf course. If your seed mix is properly sited for your climate, you can have blooms all summer. You can also plant just one variety such as out at Heron Lakes in Portland, Oregon. Jesse Goodling has planted a mono-stand of phacelia which is very popular with the black bumblebees.

Phacelia is popular with the bumblebees

Jesse has also started a few hives away from play and has found it very rewarding.
In Jackson, Wyoming, Mike Kitchen, CGCS of Teton Pines Resort & Country Club, has taken the beautification factor to the extreme. While there are programs through Bayer and Syngenta that can assist a golf course in establishing pollinator gardens, Kitchen has done this all within his own budget. While on a site visit in August, Mike toured me around the course and the wildflower plots just kept coming. We were fortunate to stop and visit with a few golfers and they even commented to Mike how much they have enjoyed the gardens. 

Wildflowers utilized as a buffer

Wildflowers utilized as a focal point next to a tee box 

Mike Kitchen, CGCS and Assistant Mark Lyon watching over their wildflower plot

As I mentioned earlier, Bayer and Syngenta both offer programs to help establish pollinator gardens on golf courses. Russell Vandehey, CGCS of The Oregon Golf Club in West Linn, Oregon worked with Syngenta's Operation Pollinator in sourcing a wildflower mix that was suitable for his region. Russel engaged some of the youth at his course to help plant the seeds which provided him with the opportunity to explain the benefits to the kids and give them a part in providing habitat. It was an excellent outreach activity for his Audubon certification.

Michael Greene at Downriver Golf Course in Spokane, Washington, applied for the Bayer Feed-a-Bee grant and was awarded $2500 to use at his course to promote pollination. Mike put the dollars to good use in planting a large wildflower meadow as well as a pumpkin patch. The pumpkin patch is located in the middle of the course next to the turf nursery. Mike also worked with a local apiarist who brought out a few of his hives for the season so the bees could take advantage of all the new habitat. Mike’s goal is to utilize the pumpkin patch and the bee boxes to educate the local school kids on our food chain and the role bees play. He children will be able to come out to the course and pick out their own pumpkin to take home for Halloween.

Michael Greene standing in what will be a productive pumpkin patch

Recent changes to the golf course created this large opportunity for a wildflower meadow. 

A local apiarist supplied these colorful bee boxes 

While writing this blog post I spoke to Douglas McCullen from Bayer and he told me that Michael Greene was one of only a very few that had actually applied for the grant from the golf industry. I was totally surprised by that and had thought more would have taken advantage. For more information, please visit the Bayer website.





Not every bee project has to be full of blooming flowers. You can also provide nesting habitat. When I was at Stone Creek Golf Club I realized that I had an area that was full of ground bees so I had a sign made that highlighted the area. Today Mike Turley and Tyler Gabriel see that the signs is still maintained and helps protect the small area of bare dirt that the bees like to dwell. This is just one example of how signage can help people recognize that fact that golf courses provide habitat for all kinds of species.

Signage used as education (sourced from archives)

Female sweat bee waiting for her suitor.


Every one of these examples can and will create opportunities for our industry advocacy. While spending time at each of these facilities, more times than not, a member or a golfer would make a comment on the flowers and how much they appreciated them. As word travels by mouth, the golf course will soon develop a reputation as an environmental stand-out. Now if you ask me, that’s not a bad reputation to have.

Also, please visit Oregon State University's PolliNation and listen to Andony Melathopoulos's interview of me back in August on golf and pollinators.