Before even stepping foot on the first tee, a golfer’s opinion of a course has already started to form. If your course has a grass practice tee, that will likely be one of the first turfgrass playing surfaces golfers encounter and its condition could influence how they perceive golf course conditions and their overall experience at the facility. Many golf courses have an undersized grass practice tee for the demands placed on it. As a result, practice tee conditions often do not mimic those that will be experienced on the course. Grass practice tees are frequently thin, bumpy and comprised of a hodgepodge of grasses. They may also be closed more often than golfers like. The practice experience is important to many golfers and you want it to be the best it can be.
If a course is struggling with their grass practice tee, the best solution is usually to make it bigger. Unfortunately, many courses simply don’t have the space or the resources to build a grass practice tee that is large enough to handle the amount of use. Most courses are happy to have a grass practice tee at all, and the focus is on getting the most from what they’ve got. How often the tee is open, the agronomic program, grass selection, and various setup strategies can all make a big difference in the overall quality of your grass practice tee and the amount of use it can handle – no matter how big or small it may be.
When to Open and Close
When a grass practice tee is open plays a key role in how it performs throughout the year. Golfers understandably want to use the grass tee as much as possible, but opening it at the wrong times and/or using it too much will lead to poor conditions and potentially more time on mats.
Actively growing turf should be the determining factor for opening and closing dates each year, and flexibility will be needed. A golf course’s location, the turf species on the tee, and weather conditions all have a major influence on these decisions. Divot recovery will take much longer if the practice tee is opened before active growth begins in the spring or if it remains open well into the fall or winter when growth is slowing and eventually stops. Additionally, excessive foot traffic on dormant or slow-growing turf can result in injury that will not recover until growth resumes. The Green Section Record article “When Should You Make the Move to Mats?” provides a good example of how to use growth potential as a guide for opening and closing a bermudagrass practice tee each year. The same principles apply to any warm- or cool-season grass tee, the timing will just vary based on the turf species/variety and the size of the tee.