The Problem with Bunkers
The Rules of golf define a bunker as:
A hazard consisting of a
prepared area of ground, often a hollow, from which turf or soil has been
removed and replaced with sand or the like. Grass-covered ground bordering or
within a bunker is not part of the bunker. A wall or lip of the bunker not covered
with grass is part of the bunker.
Source:
http://rulesacademy.randa.org/definitions/
Bunkers can be a pain in the behind from both a maintenance
and a golfing stand point. Golfers hate them and despise the thought of going
into them. Fearless is a Superintendent that wants to add bunkers or make them
bigger or even deeper. Even normal upkeep and renovations can come under the
scrutiny of passing golfers.
So why do we have them? Why does a Superintendent spend so
much time and money raking, weeding, removing rocks and debris, moving and
adding sand, trimming edges, mowing banks, refreshing drainage, fixing wash-outs
caused by rain and irrigation, repairing worn entrance and exit points,
redesigning, bowling out and installing liners. It’s funny how in depth the
list of constant daily maintenance goes into a course feature that is so
unpopular.
Over time, the sand from thousands of bunker shots ends up on the
faces of banks causing grass to die banks to slide, liners to rip, drainage lines
to clog and sand to become contaminated. The daily, monthly and yearly labour
that goes into maintaining all of the bunkers on a golf course is huge.
Line trimming bunker edges. |
Surely it would be
easier to have no bunkers, a vast expanse of kept grass from tee to green on
every hole. Surely the only purpose for bunkers on a golf course is just to get
on everyone’s nerves, a practical joke cooked up by a Scotsman all those years
ago, the perfect way to ruin a good round of golf.
Unfortunately for everyone, bunkers it would seem, are here
to stay. They are becoming larger, deeper and ever more complex in their
design. Greenkeepers are taught at school that the importance of a bunker, its
correct positioning and maintenance, is almost as important as a green, a fairway
or having a good level tee box. Their importance goes beyond whether or not a golfer
is going to hit a ball into them. They are an integral part of golf course
design, a leading factor in how the course looks, feels and plays.
Philip Christian Spogard is a Danish golf course
architect working for Thomson Perrett & Lobb in London, a company
responsible for many championship golf courses in Africa and the Middle East. In
an Article he wrote for a greenkeeping magazine in Europe he goes in to detail
his thoughts on the importance of bunkers:
"Bunkers serve many purposes; they
help dictate the
strategy of the golf holes, they
provide character and are of immense aesthetic value. In fact, the whole look
and feel of the golf course changes so dramatically depending on what style of bunkering
is chosen, that the bunkers might be considered the key design feature on most
golf courses.”
Source:
http://www.greenkeeper.eu/upload/alinea_1419.pdf
Correct bunker placement and design can change a course. It can
add drama and visual memories for golfers. When installing a bunker, the entire
surrounding area has to be thought about. How should a golfer be penalized if
they hit a poor bunker shot? Does the look of the new bunker keep within the
feel of the rest of the course? Is it historically accurate and does it work
with the standard of play of the golfers that use the course?
Bunkers on Hole 10 before renovation |
Bunkers on Hole 10 after renovation |
If a golf course had no
bunkers, playing a round of golf would be akin to hitting a ball around a
field. Correctly placed bunkers around a green help to frame the green site,
strategic bunkers to the sides of fairways, can help to catch a ball before it
flies out of bounds or even dictate the club that a golfer may use off the tee.
On face value, bunkers are a pain, but their value really does extend further
than anyone gives them credit for.
So next time you look up and that sinking feeling fills your
stomach as your ball hurtles through the air towards its sandy destination.
Remember the architects thought process with the placement of a bunker on the
course and the time, effort and money that goes into having them exist.
Picture the view without that glimpse of sand peeking
out at you, menacingly waiting for you to duff your shot, and smile.
A silent assassin on Hole 1. |
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