Saturday, January 5, 2013

Free High-Tech Irrigation Maps

Easy Irrigation Maps    
grassmd@gmail.com


Now, I know what you're thinking and no, you're not going to be drawing golf holes on a piece of paper and using colored pencils to shade in the fairways. This is a very FREE solution to a very commonly expensive problem. Now, if your course was built some time ago and, you're stuck with incredibly inaccurate maps this is going to be music to your ears. This solution is highly portable meaning, you can use it on your smartphone (apple or droid doesn't matter) in real time.


The Problem

When some of our golf courses were built there weren't a whole lot of satellites in the sky....or any for some. Designers and contractors had to do their best to give a relative description of where infrastructure was located. These maps were often rough sketches drawn out by hand or even a little more sophisticated ones printed out on very large pieces of paper (not very portable). 
Old Irrigation Map

If you have a map like this (above) one you probably have a hard time relating the information on the map to what is actually out in the field. This can be very frustrating when trying to locate wires, main lines, and valve boxes. Even more frustrating is when the map doesn't even look like the hole (the map above is a dog leg left).



Finished Product in Google Earth


Last year, I took on a project to map all the irrigation heads on a course. Maps that were dated offered little help because, the lack of detail and the inability to update them. I turned to Google Earth, from there I spent a good amount of time building each hole, making heads and stations numbers, fairway outlines, perimeters, measuring greens, and even measuring fairways. This was definitely a classic example of a project that mushroomed....very quickly.

These two pictures (above and below) are the final product of what can be achieved. This on its own is a massive step forward for golf courses that are using "old irrigation maps".  Location of heads give any superintendent using a computerized system a more efficient way of tailoring the irrigation system.

Zoomed in View


Starting the Project


The first step:

The first step and probably the most important one, is figuring out what information you want to collect and put on a map. For superintendents in the south that are thinking about doing something like this, map anything burmudagrass will grow over and you don't want to lose. Best examples would be valve boxes, QCs, wire boxes and so on.



Field Map Of Heads 

On my example (Above), I only mapped (hand drawn points) irrigation heads for the sake of time. Looking back, it would have been nice to have included a few examples from above such as those valve boxes and drainage inlets. There is always a chance for a 2.0 version!


The Second Step:

After all your points have been drawn on your field copy you are ready to input them in to Google Earth. You will be using the little yellow tac icon in the toolbar. This will allow you to choose different colors, icon, font, and sizes. One of the most important things to do is to save the points into folders by hole number. For example, all the heads on the 18th hole should be saved into its own folder.


Adding a point into Google Earth

This is the longest step in the entire process. You will spend hours inputting your points on the map. There is no real way to get the points perfectly accurate. The good news is you will be able to get your heads with in about 3-10 feet of where they are.


The Final Step

When you have finished inputting all your points you are now ready to export the file. The remarkable part is that the whole file is actually really small. This is how it is so easy to get the file onto a smartphone or tablet. 

Temporary Places Highlighted in Grey

Right clicking on the "Temporary Places" folder (highlighted in grey above) will give you a list of options. You will want to choose the "save places as" and name the file and save it to your desktop. You will now be ready to move the file (kmz. format) onto your phone. This can easily be done by emailing it to yourself. The file will go into your "Downloads" folder and be available for use.

For ease of use, you will want to download a file management app. I use ES File Explorer to simplify the opening process (believe me its much more easier to do it this way). Once you have located the file with in E.F.E. you will just add it as a favorite and set the file to open on your app homepage of E.F.E. Now with only two taps you will have your entire irrigation map of your course at your finger tips.

Another app which most people have is Google Earth on their phones or tablets. You will want to have this app if you don't already to use. Most phone operating systems will ask how you would like the file to be opened and give a list of applications to do so. You will want to select Google Earth and check the box to remember this choice. Google Earth also gives you the ability to use GPS and show your location along with the irrigation heads around you.

If you are interested in a project like this, please feel free to contact to me at grassmd@gmail.com. This description is a condensed version and there are more steps that are small and weren't included in this blog article.















Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Tomorrow's Technologies Today


"There are some people who live in a dream world, and there are some who face reality; and then there are those who turn one into the other." -Douglas Everett


I have been fortunate to have worked under some of the greatest superintendents in the country and had the chance to learn from their teachings. One of the greatest things I learned was, to always have idea of where you and the course are going. As an intern I thought of this as simple insight to a smaller picture. As an assistant now, its insight to a larger picture.

Smartphones have taught the electronic industry the simplicity of combining two gadgets to make a game changing product. The turf industry will have its smartphone sooner than later if history and technology have their way.

Anybody who has a smartphone has played around with the GPS feature and has benefited from the assistance of navigation to get them exactly where they wanted to go. One could ask, "why can't such a feature or device be utilized on a piece of equipment on a golf course"?



Precision Path RG3 


Fortunately, the ball has already started to roll in that direction. Most recently, Jacobson and NuTec (below) have introduced a GPS assisted sprayer add-ons, and Precision Path (above) has developed a robotic greens mower. These new technologies are still young but, have a serious place in the golf maintenance future.




Nutec GPS Assisted Sprayer 


The farm agriculture industry has acted like the testing and proving grounds for golf course technologies. Today's tractors steer themselves and make adjustments on the fly, saving fuel and boosting yields simultaneously. If its feasible and saves money the Ag industry has done it.

Sprayers are the first thing that come to mind when we think auto-steer and GPS. But, there is hesitation in the decision to take a highly skilled worker off a complicated machine. So why not take the average worker off the simple machine?

A company called ProbotIQ has utilized the GPS auto-steer system found in farm tractors and added it on to a Toro fairway unit. This is where the game begins to change, and its making that ball called the future get ever so closer.




Fairway Demonstration


This system is interesting because it mimics the users actions accurately. Being able to actually know where the unit is going to mow instead a computer processing a path is a benefit to avoiding a major mistake.  The system is also able to have 100s of different "paths" programmed into its computer which reduces repetition of constant mowing patterns.


Where does it begin to fit?

Golf courses are in a time when members are asking maintenance facilities to do more with less. The conflict begins with the amount of time that is needed to groom a course to member's wants. The limiting factor is the amount of labor hours a course has. For example, a maintenance facility of 10 line employees has typically 400 hours worth of work that can be completed in a week.

Start subtracting the amount of time it takes to cut greens, fairways, tees and roughs, and you're left with all your other detail jobs. Depending on your course thats usually not a whole lot of time to commit to other jobs beyond maintaining current conditions. Every course wants to be able to make improvements after regular "maintenance" is complete but, time simply is on the their side.

Technology has an opportunity to provide maintenance staffs with more time without hiring new employees. Yes, to a degree buying these technologies is like adding another employee. But, how much would the cost be when considering the amount of work that can be completed with them?

The learning curve to implement new technologies will be a large one. But then again, how long did it take until we were married our multi-million dollar irrigation systems to a PC? There is plenty to think about in the end.....



About BellaRojo

BellaRojo, is the twitter name and blog of (me) Matt Sumpter, an assistant golf course superintendent. On my blog you'll find postings mostly about golf course maintenance topics and other interesting topics related to my profession.

I went to Purdue University, studied Turf Science and had internships at Indiana National, Kinloch Golf Club, Victoria National, and Medinah Country Club. I also did a study abroad in Wales, an experience to remember.

Through my time and travels, I have learned the greatest asset to a person or company is people. As a manager, I'm always listening and watching for ways to become a better leader and/or manager. Teamwork, is the real ingredient to success, 2 heads will always be better than one.

The purpose of my blog is to share thoughts and little unique projects. I'm a firm believer in using the simple tools available to us to improve our daily jobs and maximize our efficiency. My little projects are built and used in ways to make big improvements to anybody's course for little or no cost.

My passion is taking something ordinary and making it extraordinary. Growing up, I would help my dad rebuild wrecked cars out in our barn. Quality was our pride, common sense was our guide, and passion for cars was our fuel. I found my career niche in turf thanks to my high school secretary, Sherry Lichtenberger. Somehow, she knew a small town kid from Indiana would love this job. Thank you.



Reese Jones and I