Golf Digest South Africa - June 2025

MIND / ASK A GREENKEEPER M

You Might Be Throwing Broken Tees in the Wrong Spot Where you toss them can have a substantial impact on the grounds staff BY DREW POWELL

TOSS TOSS Discarding your tee stubs into the rough helps grounds staff.

If you’re like many golfers, you might haphazardly flick broken pegs to the side of the tee markers or in the rough. But sometimes the smallest things can cause bigger headaches for maintenance staff. We asked Brandon Coe, the golf course superintendent at Orchards Golf Club in Massachusetts, where we should throw our tee stubs.

Coe: Any tees that are even slightly poking up are the worst, especially for the equipment. If you catch that at the right angle, that can do some damage. I prefer they don’t get pushed into the ground because they’re just going to sit there, and if you end up doing any sod work, it’s just a pain. Do you have a preference between wooden or plastic tees? Coe: Wooden tees are preferable. I encourage golfers to use wooden tees because they are biodegradable. Plas- tic tees are a concern for the property. Wooden tees are cheap, and you can buy them in bulk. I mentioned you should toss your broken wooden tees in the rough, but plastic tees are a different situation. Try and hold on to those because we don’t want that kind lying around anywhere. They’re not biodegradable, and they can really damage the equipment, even in the rough.

Golf Digest: Brandon, where do you think golfers should discard their broken tees? Coe: I don’t think there’s a perfect an- swer for it. It’s going to differ from golf course to golf course. In a perfect world, if you have a good maintenance budget and you have proper staff, if you’re go- ing out daily and you’re collecting tees on the tee box, that would be perfect. The majority of clubs are probably better off just tossing them into the rough where they can be mulched up by mowers. That’s what I tell mem- bers at my club to do. Depending on the rough height, the tees will likely be mulched up by the mower when it goes around. We use a blade mower in the rough, so it’s going to chop it up pretty good, and it’s not really a concern for the equipment. Either that or the tees are going to get worked in through the profile, and it’s just going to end up in the soil where it’s eroded over time, especially the wooden tees. Is there a downside to leaving the stubs on the tee box? Coe: Yes. I prefer that they get tossed into the rough and mulched up because the worst thing for us as a maintenance

staff is having them on the box where mowers are going to catch them. It can do a pretty good number on a reel mow- er, which is what we use on tee boxes. They’re better off in the rough be- cause we take a typical rotary mower that you use at home, just with a big blade, and it chops the tees up well. It’s not going to be any concern for the mower. If they’re left on the tee box and not getting picked up daily, if they get clipped by a mower, it’s a different kind of mower. On the tees we use a reel mower that’s cutting really tight and at a low height. It’s pinching the grass. If you get tees caught up in there fre- quently, it’s going to damage it. That’s our concern because it can add up on the machines being on the tee box. Tees that are left on the tee box are also a problem because it’s an extra hour’s worth of collecting the tees, so we’re not mowing over them. It’s an ex- tra strain on the staff. If you accidental- ly run over a tee with a mower on the tee box, it can not only damage the mower, but it can alter the cut of the grass. Some golfers forget to take out the stubs from the ground after hitting an iron shot. Is that bad?

Have a question for our editors? Scan this code with your phone’s camera to submit directly.

24 GOLF DIGEST SOUTH AFRICA

JUNE 2025

Made with FlippingBook interactive PDF creator