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Las Vegas Clubs Counter Water Issues With Grass Removal – Club + Resort Business
Las Vegas Clubs Counter Water Issues With Grass Removal - Club + Resort Business


Image: KTNV

Anthem Country Club Golf Course in Henderson, Nev. is currently removing about 20 acres of decorative grass, says Superintendent James Symons. In all, golf courses have recently removed 900 acres of grass [outside the playing areas] throughout the valley.

Las Vegas, Nev. clubs are rallying behind efforts to get rid of water guzzling grass, KTNV reported. The push to decrease water use across the valley comes as Lake Mead is predicted to hit a new all-time low in April.

The Bureau of Reclamation released a report on March 16 showing Lake Mead’s water level is about 1,045’, or 183 feet below its 1983 peak, KTNV reported. Despite a heavy rain and snow year in southern Nevada, the lake is predicted to hit an all-time low in April 2023 at 1036’.

Club + Resort Business previously reported on water-saving efforts at Anthem Country Club in Henderson, Nev.

“We live in the driest part of the United States and that reality sort of has to set in,” said James Symons, Superintendent of the Golf Course at Anthem Country Club.

“Here at Anthem Country Club Golf Course in Henderson,” Symons continued, “they are about halfway through with their water conservation project. Right now, crews are removing about 20 acres of decorative grass.”

Golf courses like the one at Anthem have recently removed 900 acres of grass [outside the playing areas] throughout the valley, KTNV reported.

The Southern Nevada Water Authority calls the removals one of the most effective ways to preserve the valley’s water, KTNV reported. The authority’s spokesperson, Bronson Mack, said efforts like this are making a difference.

Mack told KTNV that there are about 30 golf courses in the valley and about half of them have already reduced their yearly water usage from six acre feet to just four acre feet, KTNV reported. This adds up to about 1.3 million saved gallons of water.

Symons told KTNV these efforts are not something he would typically expect in signing up to become a golf course superintendent.

“You don’t anticipate doing this large of a scale conversion,” he continued. “We all live in this valley and this problem is big, and even with all this rain we are going to need a lot more to make a dent in this water crisis.”

This content was originally published here.










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