Saturday

Royal New Kent Restoration Recap #2 - Interview with Superintendent Mathieu LeCompte

After my tour of Royal New Kent, the Superintendent, Mathieu LeCompte was very gracious with his time and participated in an email interview. I'll add some notes on some questions, anything I write will be noted with [Brackets].

1. How much Green space do you have?

 We currently have just over 4 acres of greens which includes a small nursery green that was built at the golf maintenance facility during the greens renovation.

[The new greens are fantastic. In general, the greens here are very large. Some are 70 yards deep, others 60 yards wide. One green is roughly 13,000 square feet by my rough calculations. These are a truly impressive set of greens.]

2. How much Fairway space do you have?

We have roughly 50 acres of fairway.

[Same with the greens, Mike Strantz was known for scale. Some fairways are close to 100 yards wide in certain points.]

3. How many irrigation heads?

There are roughly 1500 irrigation heads on property. (Some of which have not run in quite some time)

4. What was the condition of the irrigation system when you took over in June? How much work has been done since then?

My first day on the job was spent replacing 20’ of a 12” main irrigation line with Willie [Downs, the site foreman] and a fellow Superintendent from down the road.  Things could only go up from there I suppose.  We have seen the typical pipe breaks and control issues of a 20 year old system but the club is scheduled to upgrade our central irrigation computer, satellite controllers, and several irrigation heads this fall.  That will greatly reduce many of the issues that we have encountered this summer.

5. What was the most difficult part of growing in the new Champion greens?

Time was certainly the biggest challenge.  When I began mid-June we had no grass on the greens, no equipment to prepare a surface onto which we could sprig, no control of a few of our greens’ irrigation heads, and no employees to help get us where we needed to be by mid-July.  

[I was stunned by the quality of the greens in early October 2018. They were in absolutely fantastic condition. Mat and the staff did an incredible job with this.]

Thanks to several kind hearted superintendents, one of the best mechanics that I know who somehow pieced together what was left of the equipment left behind by previous owners, and a handful of individuals that had no golf experience but were up for a few 14+ hour days while restoring this property, we managed to have greens somewhat put together when the sprigs rolled into town.

6. Aside from being 10-12 inches tall, how healthy was the fairway turf when you took over?

The turf itself was relatively healthy.  There was a fair amount of spring dead spot and a good amount of weeds but the grass plants that were here were tall, green, and happy.

7. Willie Downs told me that the drainage system was damaged. How much work is required for that to be fully functional?

The drainage system is certainly one of our big issues and sadly one that many recent golfers will remember.  We are in the process of correcting 100+ drain breaks that have caused sink holes throughout our fairways and rough.

[In the previous video, large patches of high weeds, 3-4 feet tall in some cases, could be seen in the fairways. These weeds were growing in/around the malfunctioning drainage pipes. I saw one of the pipes that had been partially unearthed, one of the reasons for the malfunctions was that originally the pipes were laid down and simply bent upwards to the drain grate. This caused failures in the pipes over the years. As I was told, when they're rebuilt, it will be done with elbow joints in the ground rather than bending the pipe.]

8. I noticed some patches of zoysia encroachment in the fairways. What are your plans for that?

Both zoysia and bermudagrass have proven to provide outstanding playing surfaces for some of golf’s biggest events.  At this point, we plan to maintain both grasses in our fairways, understanding that in any given microclimate one grass will prove itself better suited for healthy growth.  Achieving full coverage of quality playing surfaces is our top priority.

9. Where would you like to see the course, in terms of turf health and maintenance, in one year?

I see the course in great playing condition by the time that we open in the spring of 2019 and continuously improving.  If the guys of this maintenance team continue to put forth the effort and excitement that they have shown, this place will truly be something special.


Thanks for participating Mat. When I played the course 8 years ago, I found it to be an incredible place even then. That was with some already degraded conditions. With the money being spent to improve the course and the fantastic staff in place, I think this course will take a place among the elite courses in Virginia.

Sunday

Royal New Kent Restoration Recap #1

Saturday

Trip to Vermont and New Hampshire

Back a couple weeks ago, I finally worked out a time that Tony Pioppi and I could play. The capstone course of the day trip was Hooper, ranked the seventh best nine hole course in North America in Tony's book The Finest Nines, available here. From there, I found three other nine hole courses in close proximity to Hooper. One of them was discarded because of time constraints. On the day, we played Bellows Falls, Hooper, and Pine Grove Springs.

Bellows Falls was fantastic. Tony is vigorously researching as I write this to find out who designed the course. Whoever did the design knew what he or she was doing. The first two holes are incredible holes. I'm trying to remember if I've ever played two opening holes as good as these; I can say with certainty that the opening two at Bellows Falls are better than the opening two at Bethpage Black. The course could handle a bit of work, not even something a course architect would be needed for, just an expansion of mowing lines, a little tree thinning, and a good aeration/topdressing of the greens. That said, the course is stellar. Common statements during the round were "whoever designed this knew how to build golf holes" and "how has no one ever told me about this place?" It's not often that a true gem can be found by chance, but it certainly happened here. Full review forthcoming.

Hooper was the capstone course in the trip and did not disappoint. All the holes are good holes and the round works up and down, with easier shots followed by difficult shots. The opening par 5 is a fantastic hole. Well placed shots can give an excellent opportunity for birdie to start off the round. The holes have great variety, very long par 4s and short 54s, a good spread in yardage on the par 3s, and solid variety on the two 5s. This course was just purchased by a new owner, hopefully he can do some good work with the course. This is certainly a nine hole course worth a significant trip to see. Full review forthcoming.

Pine Grove Springs...Hole 1 and hole 9 are good holes with really good greens. The turf on the greens here was the best of the three courses we played. I don't want to write a mean-spirited review, so I'll just leave this one here.

Hooper was the best of the trip, but, in my opinion, not by a wide margin. Bellows Falls was very good. I asked Tony on the 8th tee if Bellows would be an honorable mention for his best 25 if it goes for a second addition or even in the top 25. I have not played all the courses, but I will say that I certainly think Bellows Falls is better than one of the courses on the list that I have played. Fantastic courses and a great trip. Oh, and the BBQ joint in Brattleboro, VT, Top of the Hill Grill, has decent pulled pork, good ribs, good brisket, and stellar scenery. Eat there. Great trip...Bellows Falls, Hooper, and Top of the Hill, I'd do that again.