Greenkeeping
Common Myths About Greenkeeping
A plain-English guide to greenkeeping with the course details that make it useful.

Why golfers argue about it
Greenkeeping produces surfaces that challenge every assumption about how a shot will behave. Aeration, oversowing, drought-hardening, and heavy rain all create conditions that two experienced players can read differently. Neither is wrong; they’re responding to the same uncertainty from different angles.
Common misconceptions:
- Firm and fast always means better golf — in truth it often means more variance and less forgiveness.
- Aeration is a nuisance — in reality it is the most important maintenance practice for long-term green health.
- Slow greens are poorly maintained — often they reflect deliberate protection of recovering turf.
- Rough should always be cut short for fair conditions — penalising wayward drives is part of course design.
A better stance
The players who adapt fastest to conditioning changes are the ones who observe without complaining. Walk a hole early, check the first-bounce behaviour, and adjust the game plan before the round demands it.