With the courses still very wet from another week of rainy weather, most of our time was split between blowing leaves and winterizing the irrigation systems. Every fall all the water has to be removed from the irrigation systems to prevent ice from forming and damaging critical irrigation components. As water freezes it expands and ice is much stronger than plastic pipe. I've even seen ice cause steel pipe to split open. The first step in the process is to shut down the three pump stations, open all drain valves, and let gravity remove most of the water. Once the water has drained out a large air compressor is connected to the irrigation systems and air is forced through the lines at a high volume, but low pressure. Too much air pressure can damage pipe and irrigation heads the same way high water pressure does. The staff will then split up into several teams and go to every satellite control box to systematically turn on approximately 1,300 irrigation heads to blow out any remaining water. After all the heads are blown out we will go back to the areas that tend to hold water and run through those heads for a second time. It usually takes 4 full days to winterize both irrigation systems.
In addition to the two irrigation systems on the golf courses, the maintenance staff is responsible for winterizing the restroom facility on each nine, along with miscellaneous landscape irrigation and a water line in the driving range building.
The mist coming out of the irrigation head is water vapor being pushed by the compressed air. |
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