My team and I have now been asked a few times “what
is with all the holes and digging around the clubhouse and 10th tee?” Well, one of
the club’s and GolfBC’s main goals over the past few years is to become self
sufficient with irrigation water. The past two falls we have spent a great deal
of effort to expand our reservoir to a capacity that we feel will allow us to
irrigate the entire golf course and practice facility without having to utilize
municipal water.
Now that
the reservoir is complete, we are now onto phase 2 of the project. Our practice
facility is currently feed strictly by municipal water and we have no means of
getting our water to it. So phase 2 consists of tying our on course irrigation
system into the practice facility and then upgrading our Pumphouse to become
capable of supplying the water. The
current irrigation mainline ends just behind the 17th tee. Our plan
is to extend it from there, beside the 10th tee leading around the
clubhouse towards the practice facility. With being relatively new to Olympic
View, we knew there would be some bedrock we’d had to deal with, but after
digging a few test holes, we found it was going to be much more of a problem
than originally anticipated. With that, our plan has changed countless times
due to our discoveries but we are now set and have our plan. Much of the
digging should be completed by the weekend and we’re hoping to get a start on
laying some of the pipe early next week. In 2 sections the pipe will actually
lay directly on the surface due to the bedrock. With that, we chose to use High
Density Polyethylene (HDPE) pipe as it is flexible and doesn’t deteriorate in
the sun. As the HDPE pipe is flexible, we therefore needed to build restraints
(sleepers) for them to hold the pipe in place. We utilized two different sized
steel pipes acting as a sleeve which were buried in cement. One of the largest
challenges of this project so far was the length of the pipe! Each pipe was 50
feet long and weighed roughly 200lbs.
Once
this is complete, we will move down to the Pumphouse. Our pumps themselves have been well maintained and are
in very good shape, allowing them to last another 15-20 years. The control panel and
piping, well, that is a different story... They are well past their prime and
over the past 2 seasons we’ve experienced small yet inconvenient failures. So
with the increased demand on the pumps, a new control panel and piping is
necessary to perform the task of watering the practice facility. Work on this
is scheduled to start immediately following the completion of the mainline and
should be complete by mid-March.
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