FSJ Links - Nearly time to Swing By

FSJ Links - Nearly time to Swing By
Links - Your In Town Course

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Counting Birdies At Links

Golfers affection for birdies is well documented. Shooting under par on any hole is an achievement worth talking about. Achieving an eagle or an albatross is even more note worthy. However, the most common birds found at Links are the kind with wings! The course is habitat for many different species of birds. From the mallards that have taken up residence in the 1st hole dugout to the swallows that swoop from their 150 yard marker bird houses, all of the fine feathered varieties of birds indicate that Links is an environmentally friendly and healthy habitat.

The swallows are my personal favorites. Not only are they fascinating to watch as they skim the surface and dart about the course in the early dawn or twilight, swallows are valuable as insectivores! Swallows eat many flying insects, including mosquitoes and other harmful species. They can cover over 600 miles per day and consume more than their own body weight of flying pests every day.

Other birds found on the course include robins, starlings and magpies.  A robin's diet consists of  bugs, worms and berries. It is one of the earliest bird species to lay eggs. Nests consist of long coarse grass, twigs, paper, and feathers,smeared with mud and are often cushioned with grass or other soft materials. Robins are also amongst the first birds to sing at dawn, with songs consisting of several distinct notes that are often repeated. The ever present starlings are also omnivorous, preferring insects but willing to help them selves to other opportunities as they arise.

Magpies are perhaps the least liked birds at Links. Members of the crow family, they are intelligent but extremely noisy. They are opportunistic feeders and can become quite aggressive in their tactics. They will eat insects when they have to, but seem to prefer the company, and garbage, of humans. At LInks magpies have built a few rather impressive nests. These can often be seen in the trees down the left side of #2 fairway. A very large example nest exists in the trees behind the club locker shed.

The presence of so many bird species at Links is a good indicator that the course is environmentally friendly and an excellent source of habitat. Golf courses sometimes get a bad rep as environmental hazards due to an alleged reliance on chemical fertilizers and pesticides. In reality, most courses strive for a healthy balance between natural and man made solutions. That so many birds call Links home, is a testament to the course's success in attaining this balance. Hopefully you will always find your fair share of birdies at Links. Whether they are on your score card or just in the trees is up to you!



Monday, April 28, 2014

Just About Time!

Last week snow - this week sunny skies!  So where were you a year ago? Chances are if you're a Links regular you were waiting on winter! It was a particularly cold wet spring and we had to endure snowfall after snowfall. It finally looks like we may have seen the last of the white stuff.


The extended shoulder season of daytime melting and over night freezing is coming to a close. This weekend temperatures are expected to reach double digits during the day and, more importantly stay at or above freezing at night!  The course is mostly bare and all we need is some sustained warmth and a little bit of rain and things will be green in no time!

Regional micro climates mean that Taylor's Lone Wolf course is always the first local course to open. Flying home from Vancouver last week, I saw that their course seems to have come through the winter well. A friend who lives in the Charlie Lake area tells me their snow has also retreated but never quite as fast as residents would like. Pictures taken Easter weekend  show we were almost snow free. We've pulled the snow blankets off the greens and had our first peek at what's beneath. Some came through really well. The others will need a little TLC but should be ready soon. Mice had a field day on some greens and tee boxes, but if the weather comes through as predicted, warm and a little moist, new growth should be popping up in no time.
From here on the news should be good!  Some continued good weather and concentrated preparation efforts will soon have members out on the course. Hopefully, the weather cooperates and folks will be able to start swinging by soon!