Evergreen | Inquirer Sports

Evergreen

Golf clubs find ways to keep courses maintained and in tiptop shape as they await return of players
By: - Reporter / @MusongINQ
/ 04:40 AM April 19, 2020

Sprinklers keep Villamor’s fairways watered regularly. —OSCAR CALINGASAN/CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

From as far as Davao and Cebu down south, to that Robert Trent Jones-created gem in the north and the demanding, well-manicured layouts in Manila or very near it, golf courses are getting the same treatment at this time of the enhanced community qua­rantine as if its members will be playing tomorrow.

Exclusive layouts have stay-in staff, while Villamor Golf Club, the public championship course in Pasay that is the home of the Philippine Masters, even has its own general manager locked down inside the complex to assure that everything is run well and that the course is kept in shape.

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“You’ll never know when the lockdown will end,” said general manager Oscar Calingasan of Villamor, who has stayed inside his place of work since the lockdown was ordered. “Every day, [the maintenance crew] cuts the grass on the fairways, mounds and greens.

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Skeleton force

“In case you want to play, you can do so now,” Calingasan added with a laugh.

Manila Southwoods and Alabang, two exclusive clubs located very near Manila, have skeleton forces working every day to keep their courses in top shape. Southwoods, which has the Legends and the Masters layouts, has 10-15 people wor­king daily to keep the well-mani­cured look on its layouts.

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A rainbow plunges into the trees that serve as a backdrop for Manila Southwoods’ sixth fairway. —MUSONG R. CASTILLO

Environmental impact

“We can’t let the grass grow so much,” SW’s Jerome Dela­riarte said. “Our greens have the priority, the fairways get watered no more than twice a week, so we save on water cost. This has a great impact on the environment.”

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Alabang, like Wack Wack in Mandaluyong, is being maintained by a third party, and both clubs have staff that they quartered in their respective complexes to keep their cour­ses in shape.

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“We can be ready in two days’ time after the lockdown is ordered lifted,” said Erwin Vinluan, the former pro who is now Wack Wack’s golf director. “The challenge for us right now is the water for the course. We outsource our water and we are having trouble with that.”

Ready after lockdown

“We have a total of 24 people housed in our complex,” Ala­bang’s Henry Arabejo said. “All of them are crucial in maintaining the shape of the course. Yes, we can be ready the day after the lockdown.”

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Alta Vista in Cebu and Rancho Palos Verdes in Davao are doing the same.

“It’s as if we are still open,” Nimrod Quiñones of Alta Vista told the Inquirer over the phone. “It’s business as usual for the maintenance crew. We apply our fertilizers when we need to and cut the grass when we need to.”

Luisita in Tarlac, one of six Trent Jones-designed courses in the country, has done more than that.

“We have taken advantage of this break to do the repairs on the entire facility, including painting of the clubhouse,” Je­ric Hechanova said. “Of course, our main product is the golf course, so we are keeping that in great shape.”

These courses also haven’t forgotten the unsung heroes of their businesses, as they have taken care of their caddies and the others in their times of need.

“Monthly assessments have been given to our members,” Tommy Inigo, the newspaper photographer turned Palos Verdes general manager said. “Our members have been ready to lend a helping hand, starting from Day One.”

Villamor general manager Oscar Calingasan (right) supervises tee boys and girls repairing driving range stalls. —CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

Help for caddies

Southwoods, Villamor, Ala­bang and all the others have done the same, with caddies, umbrella girls and those dependent on the clubs’ day-to-day operations getting help in the form of cash and relief goods.

“That’s the least we can do for them,” Delariarte said. “So we are one in praying that all of this ends soon, so everyone can go about doing what they were doing before and continue to earn a living for their families.”

The health emergency situ­ation in the country hasn’t turned for the better as of this writing, but all the general managers that the Inquirer talked to said that they will continue to treat their courses with the tender loving care the they deserve.

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“When this is all over, I’m sure that all the players will be looking forward to pla­ying a round,” Calingasan said. “And we will be ready to welcome them with open arms and give them the enjoyment they missed.”

TAGS: Alta Vista, Golf, lockdown, Manila Southwoods, quarantine, Rancho Palos Verdes, Sports, Villamor Golf Club, Wack Wack

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