The Hawaii golf course that hosts the PGA Tour’s season opener was on its seventh day with out irrigation water Thursday, a severe setback in its bid to save lots of the Plantation course at Kapalua in time for the January match.
The dearth of irrigation stems from a dispute with Maui Land & Pineapple over its century-old water system on Maui that delivers irrigation to west a part of the island.
Kapalua Golf Resort determined final week to shut the course on Sept. 2 for 2 months to make use of the water it was allowed to guard the turf, together with verticut mowing to skinny out lifeless grass and permit it to higher take up water, and a slow-releasing fertilizer.
However then a tricky scenario received worse when MLP went from a Tier 2 restriction (60% of regular irrigation) to Tier 4 (no irrigation) over the weekend. Kapalua had not watered the Plantation course since Aug. 29.
Alex Nakajima, the overall supervisor of Kapalua Golf and Tennis, mentioned plans to verticut and different measures have been placed on maintain.
“We have now all of the plans to behave,” Nakajima mentioned Thursday. “However with out water, we won’t do something. It is powerful.”
On the heart of the dispute is the 11-mile Honokohau Stream and Ditch System that runs from the West Maui mountains and provides irrigation water to the Kapalua space.
Tadashi Yanai, the Japanese billionaire who owns Kapalua and who based the attire model Uniqlo, together with Kapalua owners and Hua Momona Farms, filed a lawsuit Aug. 18 in opposition to MLP, alleging it has not maintained the water supply system.
Maui Land & Pineapple mentioned it has made “sure repairs and enhancements to the ditch system” as directed by the Fee on Water Useful resource Administration and that every one its actions are “in keeping with the agreements between MLP and the golf programs.”
The PGA Tour has been at Kapalua since 1982, first as a part of the unofficial season late within the yr earlier than changing into the season opener in 1999. Wisconsin-based Sentry Insurance coverage is the title sponsor of a match that officers say brings some $50 million to the realm.
“We warned beforehand that one other Tier 4 shutdown could be devastating to turfgrass already depleted from months with out irrigation,” Kapalua mentioned in an announcement. “With the course’s restoration already unsure below Tier 2, a second compelled dormancy makes making ready the Plantation Course to PGA Tour requirements for January much more painstaking and tenuous.”
Nakajima couldn’t say how for much longer the course may go with out water earlier than it places the beginning of the PGA Tour season (Jan. 5-11) in jeopardy.
“The longer we wait, it isn’t good for us,” he mentioned.