Search OCA:
Get Local!

Find Local News, Events & Green Businesses on OCA's State Pages:

OCA News Sections
Organic Consumers Association

Exclusive Golf Course Is Organic

  • Exclusive Golf Course Is Organic, So Weeds Get In
    By Bill Pennington
    The New York Times, August 16, 2010
    Straight to the Source

EDGARTOWN, Mass. - Standing alongside the 13th green at the Vineyard Golf Club on Martha's Vineyard, Jeff Carlson spotted a small broadleaf weed between his feet. As the superintendent charged with maintaining the club grounds, he instinctively bent to pluck it, then stopped.

"We have a weed here or there," he said unapologetically.

It was the rarest acknowledgment in American golf course landscaping - the Vineyard Golf Club is not meant to be as unnaturally perfect as many of the country's best-known courses.

Opened eight years ago, the club is thought to be the only completely organic golf course in the United States, its 18 holes groomed without the use of a single synthetic pesticide, fertilizer, herbicide or other artificial chemical treatment.

"When we started here, some of my peers thought this golf course would be a dust bowl," Carlson said, walking across a lush, smooth green toward a rolling, verdant fairway. "I admit I wasn't so sure it could be done myself. People said we were crazy."

The club has a more prominent endorsement now. The nation's first golfer, President Obama, is expected to play here while vacationing this month, after playing the course twice last year.

With golf courses increasingly being criticized for environmentally unfriendly practices, the Vineyard Golf Club has become a petri dish for alternative maintenance techniques. Carlson has learned to kill weeds with boiling water and a natural foam cocktail and to remove moss with kitchen dish detergent, and he has transported microscopic worms from Iowa to attack turf-ruining grubs. He has disrupted the mating cycle of damaging oriental beetles with a strategically placed scent and has grown grass that he believes is more resistant to disease because it developed without chemicals.

The staff at the Vineyard Golf Club are now seen as environmental pioneers, with many in the golf industry examining their methods. The club's organic model could become the successful experiment that helps push thousands of courses toward using fewer pesticides, less water and more natural grass-growing procedures.

"Everyone won't be able to go fully organic, but we're proving you can severely cut back on synthetic chemicals," Carlson said.   


>>> Read the Full Article

For more information on this topic or related issues you can search the thousands of archived articles on the OCA website using keywords: