Wednesday, April 15, 2026

What the Masters Reminded Me

While attending the 2026 Masters, I found myself doing what golf course superintendents always do: watching the turf. 

As the week progressed and temperatures rose, it became clear that conditions at Augusta National were beginning to stress some of the overseeded perennial ryegrass, as well as a few areas on the greens. With firm and fast conditions clearly the priority, it was interesting to watch how the golf course responded from day to day under those circumstances. Most people may not notice those subtle changes, but superintendents do. We cannot help ourselves; its how we are wired.

As I watched those daily changes throughout the week, I was reminded of a conversation I had a little over a year ago with Steve Rabideau, Golf Course Superintendent at Winged Foot Golf Club in New York. Steve and I were standing along the cliffs at Torrey Pines while attending the GCSAA Golf Championship, talking about the profession, the challenges, and the realities of trying to grow and maintain exceptional turfgrass. 

He asked me how my season was going, and I remember saying, Well, its been a little challenging with the weather.” At the time, my team and I were in the middle of managing through a very strong El NiƱo pattern—excessive rainfall, very little sunlight, and conditions that simply did not allow the golf course to respond the way it typically does when it has everything it needs to thrive. For warm-season turfgrass, sunlight is essential. Without it, you can manage, but you are rarely able to achieve the consistency and quality you expect from yourself.

That was certainly the case for us that year. Still, we managed to keep the golf course moving in the right direction. We had turfgrass on every surface, but it was not performing at the level we are accustomed to delivering during the vast majority of the courses 30+ years. That is extremely frustrating when you care deeply about your work and hold yourself to a very high standard.

The truth is that golf course superintendents spend a great deal of their time managing variables they cannot control. We try to produce healthy, consistent playing conditions while working with living plants in an outdoor environment. Weather changes. Moisture changes. Sunlight changes. Pest pressure changes. Disease pressure changes. Growth rates change, often affecting clipping yield and green speed. And through it all, expectations rarely change.

Clearly, I understand those expectations. In many ways, they are a compliment. People care about the golf course. They notice the details. They appreciate good conditions. They want it to be great. I respect that. But I have often said and believe wholeheartedly that nobody who has ever played my golf course has higher expectations for it than I do.


That is why a comment Steve made that day stayed with me. When I asked how things were going for him, he said they were doing well, but they had also experienced their share of ups and downs over the years because of weather and all the challenges that come with managing turfgrass. Then he shared an analogy he had used with some of his members, many of whom work in the financial world.

He said that when a member would question why the golf course could not be 100% perfect every day of the year, he would sometimes explain it this way: The market is not much different than the turfgrass a superintendent manages.”

Just as a financial advisor, no matter how experienced, intelligent, or successful, cannot predict or control every rise and fall of the market, a golf course superintendent cannot predict or control every weather pattern or growing condition that comes his way. That comparison resonated with me immediately, and it still does.

Of course, experience matters. The longer you work in this profession, the more patterns you recognize, the more adversity you have been through, and the better prepared you are to respond when conditions become difficult. Experience sharpens your instincts. It helps you anticipate problems. It teaches patience, and it gives perspective. But experience does not eliminate uncertainty. It simply helps you manage it better. 

Watching the Masters this year reminded me of that again. Even on one of the most admired golf courses in the world, turfgrass is always responding. It is always changing. There is no pause button. There is no perfect formula that overcomes every environmental challenge. There is only preparation, observation, adjustment, and the ongoing commitment to do the very best you can with the conditions you are given.

That is the profession.

Yes, perfection is always the goal. It should be. High standards matter. Pride matters. Attention to detail matters. But perfection every single day of the year is not always realistic when you are working with nature.

What matters most is showing up every day with knowledge, passion, perspective, and a willingness to manage through whatever comes your way. That, to me, is one of the great challenges of being a golf course superintendent. It is also one of the things that makes the work so meaningful.

Saturday, April 4, 2026

Annual Report To The Membership

Prepared by:

Darren J. Davis, CGCS


darrenjdavis@oldefloridagolfclub.com

(239) 860-3920 - Cell

(239) 353-4441 - Office


www.DarrenJDavisGCS.com


As we wind down another terrific winter golf season at Olde Florida, I wanted to provide an update on course conditions, the weather challenges we have faced, and the work planned for the months ahead.


As your golf course superintendent, my responsibility is to ensure the golf course remains healthy, attractive, and playing the way it should. That requires a balance of agronomy, leadership, logistics, budgeting, and constant day-to-day problem-solving. Even with careful planning and a dedicated team, weather still plays a major role in the final result and has a significant influence on our success.


This has been another unusual year from a weather standpoint, and I am very proud of how our team has responded. We experienced some of the coldest winter weather we have seen in nearly 20 years, along with several significant frosts that sent our TifTuf bermudagrass, a warm-season turfgrass, into dormancy.


February 9, 2026

In addition to that stretch of cold weather, we have also dealt with an extended period of drought. Olde Florida finished 2025 with 47.12 inches of rainfall, well below our annual average of 60 inches and far short of the 98.85 inches we received in 2024. The dry pattern continued into 2026, with only 1.8 inches of rain in January and just 0.25 inches in February. Fortunately, we have recently started to receive some much-needed precipitation, and March finished at 1.87 inches, which is right at the historical average for the month. With much of Florida still experiencing significant drought, we are hopeful that the typical rainy season, which usually begins in mid-May, will bring some relief.



TifTuf


Even under these somewhat atypical weather conditions, TifTuf, which is highly regarded for its drought tolerance, has continued to perform exceptionally well at Olde Florida and has provided an outstanding playing surface. Since our successful 2021 renovation, when we achieved our goal of greater than 99 percent purity through eradication and re-grassing, we have seen a slight decline in purity each year. That is not unusual, as complete eradication of existing bermudagrass is not possible and some common bermudagrass can also return from viable seed. Even so, I would estimate we remain approximately 93 to 94 percent pure TifTuf.


Our 26-year-old stand of TifEagle on the greens and TifGrand collars have also performed very well this year.


April 4, 2026 

Summer Projects


Looking ahead, we will continue many of the same summer programs that have served the golf course well in recent years. These include the essential cultural practices of aerification, vertical mowing, and topdressing, all of which play an important role in maintaining healthy, firm, and consistent playing conditions.


In 2023, we expanded our topdressing program beyond tees and greens to include fairways. Today, all 25 acres of fairways receive one-quarter inch of sand annually, with wetter fairways receiving an additional one-quarter inch as needed. It is a significant investment, but it has resulted in firmer, better-draining fairways, and we plan to continue that practice again this summer.


Since 2019, we have also performed a minimum of two aggressive soil-modification programs annually on our 33-year-old greens. This summer, we will once again utilize the Drill and Fill process on all greens. This machine creates a one-inch-by-ten-inch channel that is completely filled with sand, providing effective pathways through the root zone. We will perform this process twice again on all greens this summer.


We will also continue our lake bank reclamation project. In 2021, we installed the ShoreSox erosion system adjacent to the 1st and 5th greens, and last summer we installed the system adjacent to the 2nd green. ShoreSox is a geotextile-based system with a patented anchoring design that helps stabilize shorelines and prevent future erosion. This summer, we will complete 850 linear feet adjacent to the 10th, 14th, and 16th greens.


Drainage work, tree trimming, and underbrush maintenance will also remain important summer priorities. All of the cultural practices we perform during the summer months, when turfgrass is growing most actively, go a long way toward preparing the golf course for winter conditioning. Just as importantly, they help the course endure challenging weather patterns and position us for success when the season returns.


Vanderbilt Beach Road Extension Update


Many of you have continued to ask about the Vanderbilt Beach Road Extension project, so I wanted to share a brief update. This project is a seven-mile extension of the existing six-lane road, beginning at Collier Boulevard and ending at 16th Street.

The project began in the fall of 2022, and unfortunately, weather-related challenges in 2024 slowed progress. As a result, the estimated completion date shifted from fall 2025 to spring 2026.


The final connection from our lake system to the new canal was made during the summer of 2025 and is functioning extremely well.


The eight-foot chain-link fence bordering our entire property line was completed this winter, and the landscaping with Areca palms has also been finished. Through negotiations with the county, we were fortunate to secure the ability to plant and maintain a landscape barrier on county property at road elevation. This area sits approximately ten feet above the elevation of the 9th fairway, and over time it will provide both a sound and visual barrier.


Golf Cart Usage


I would also like to thank the majority of the membership for driving golf carts responsibly and according to club policy. As a reminder, we ask that all members and guests keep golf carts off the turfgrass around tees by exiting the path only after the last green-and-white post, and keep carts outside the green-and-white posts around putting greens. Your adherence to this policy benefits your fellow members and helps us provide the highest-quality turfgrass possible for everyone to enjoy.


Thank you, as always, for your support and interest in the golf course. Please feel free to reach out anytime if I can assist with anything. If you are not already doing so, please follow the Olde Florida Facebook page and subscribe to my blog for more frequent updates on the golf course. Links to both can be found on my website. www.DarrenJDavisGCS.com