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Be fore-warned: Golf courses will be saturated in water crisis

Jun 12, 2008 12:00 AM (173 days ago) by Frank Deford, The Examiner
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Related Topics: BALTIMORE
BALTIMORE (Map, News) - I have always thought that golf courses are perhaps the finest collaborative work between God and man. Yes, only God can make a tree, but golf course architects can make trees seem prettier, and golf course superintendents can make the grass greener and the flowers brighter, so that even when you can’t hit a fairway or sink a putt, it certainly is an awfully lovely place to be frustrated.

The only thing is, the whole experience, the whole sport, is utterly dependent on one thing: H20. Water. And, of course, we don't have enough water anymore for all the people on this earth. And, of course, whereas we lack oil, there are other forms of energy, but when we lack water we simply get thirstier.

A golf course is a selfish creature.

There are now approximately 16,000 courses in the United States -- about half the total in all the world -- and if you laid them out together, they would be as large as Delaware. Granted, Delaware is a small state, but I don’t imagine if you took all the baseball diamonds and all the football fields and all the basketball and tennis courts and put them all together they would even make up a Rhode Island. And that Delaware of golf courses uses water, lots of it. 

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They call them “greens” for a reason, don’t they?

Audobon International estimates that the average American course uses 312,000 gallons per day. In a place like Palm Springs, where 57 golf courses challenge the desert, each course eats up a million gallons a day. That is, each course each day in Palm Springs consumes as much water as an American family of four uses in four years.

Now, granted, it’s easy to pick on golf. It’s a rich man's game, and when we see its stewards, they’re always in military blazers and they’re stuffy and pompous. But a great many people in golf are catching on.

Dr. Eleanor Sterling, the curator for a magnificent exhibit about the water crisis that's been at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, tells me: “There are opportunities for the sport to adapt, and there are signs that it is doing so.”

In its May issue, Golf Digest devoted a huge, candid article by John Barton to the subject, in which the magazine states very frankly: “Golf will face a crisis over water.” 

And then it outlines what must be done. Must. Must. It won’t be easy.

Golf Digest points out, for example, that an incredible 41 percent of golfers polled believe global warming is a myth. Could there be any other group in the world, including ostriches, where so many are so dense?

But amongst the 59 per cent of the enlightened golfers, the problem is being addressed. Perhaps as many as a 1,000 courses are using recycled or reclaimed water, and the United States Golf Association has made that mandatory for some areas of the Southwest. 

New grasses are being developed that require less moisture to thrive. Overseeding is being frowned upon. Courses are being returned more to their natural state so grass will often have to lose some of its sheen. You see, at the end of the day, for golf to go green and accommodate itself to the real world, it’s simply going to have to be much more brown.

Frank Deford can be reached at flamegarden@aol.com

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Examiner Reader said:
Dude, come into the 21st century and leave your old white guy racist beliefs behind. Are you friggin' serious? Nah, you gotta be kidding. Some old fart like you? Geez!

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4:20 PM MST on Thu., Jul. 3, 2008 re: "Hope springs eternal for Baltimore’s Phelps"

Examiner Reader said:
your chauvanistic gilman background shows. what about hoff she is from baltimore too. you seem to dismiss the williams as unamerican---perhaps because they are women also

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7:46 AM MST on Thu., Apr. 17, 2008 re: "TKO: Technology Knockout"

Examiner Reader said:
This is quite possibly the stupidest article I've read in a while. Frank, was press time five minutes away when you coined this piece?

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2:48 PM MST on Tue., Apr. 15, 2008 re: "Maybe it’s time to extinguish the Olympic torch"

Examiner Reader said:
Great article; agree with it entirely. The Olympics have lost their prestige, and this year in Beijing, the IOC will recognize this reality when it sees the declining interest from worldwide audiences. And indeed, let's ask the athletes to skip the opening ceremonies and demand that President Bush boycott the games altogether; it's his job to speak diplomatically with action.

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7:39 PM MST on Thu., Jan. 31, 2008 re: "Super Bowl, Shakespeare style"

Brian O'Rourke said:
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5:07 PM MST on Mon., Jan. 14, 2008 re: "A variety of thoughts on the Mitchell Report now that the dust has begun to settle"

Examiner Reader said:
this so called legal system will destroy a thousand white men to destroy one black man. if they want him bad enough. and they do. racism is more clandestine and senister in this country than anywhere else in the world. we black men are considered a threat and always have been. but the table is taking a slow turn. but don't worry we'll show you some love. obviously something you know nothing about.

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3:08 AM MST on Thu., Dec. 27, 2007 re: "Need an Owner’s Manual? Here’s one"

avid reader said:
Angelos would not listen to anyone who made sense about making baseball interesting again in Baltimore.

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8:01 AM MST on Fri., Oct. 5, 2007 re: "Time to take the ‘foot’ out of football"

Michael said:
Football was named after the length of the ball, one foot. It has nothing to do with using your feet. And no one cares about soccer anyway. You could change its name to kickball. Oh, and basketball will be bounceball. And change tennis to racketball, racketball to wallball, and golf to metalstickball. Hey, volleyball. Theres one you can keep. Some people will search high and low to find something to complain about. Isn't there real sports news in D.C. that you can write about.

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5:41 PM MST on Mon., Sep. 10, 2007 re: "Time to take the ‘foot’ out of football"

Ron Redmerski said:
No way was this supposed to happen. Not like this, anyway. Four years ago when the ACC decided to expand, the prevailing thought on Tobacco Road was that the SEC had some competition. Finally. A 12 team super conference that included two Florida schools and, arguably, New England’s top athletic program. The talent-rich, fertile Newport Beach/Hampton recruiting areas were going to help the ACC yield top five football programs like Pez dispensers spit out candy. Well, if yesterday was any indication of how far the ACC has come, we won’t be eating Elvis Pez any time soon. Losing to an underrated East Carolina team is one thing (not to mention struggling with UAB, a program beaten by Michigan State 55-12 the week prior), but getting run over, completely throttled, by LSU and Oklahoma is quite another. The aforementioned powers made quick and decisive work of Virginia Tech and Miami (and that’s saying it nicely), respectively, the two programs that had John Swofford and the ACC bras

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6:05 PM MST on Fri., Aug. 17, 2007 re: "Tall tales: Best athletes seem to rise"

Examiner Reader said:
Frank Deford's editorial on tall tales: Best athletes seem to rise Growth hormones does wonders ask my 16 year old son who is on them for medical reasons due to cancer treatment as a baby! If an adult or even a child is using them and they shouldn't be who knows what problems they may have down the road.

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5:45 AM MST on Tue., May. 15, 2007 re: "Taking a trip up memory lane"

Examiner Reader said:
Reminds me of the old line about horseracing as the sport of kings. But you never saw any kings @the $2 window.

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