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The Westmounter










             from the pro shop







                                                                                       ROB STRAHAN
                                                                           HEAD GOLF PROFESSIONAL




                                               In my 43 years working in this industry, I’ve never

                                               witnessed anything like the summer of 2020. From

                                               the time the pandemic hit in March until the last
                                               leaves fell on the property this fall, the golf season

                                               nearing an end is one none of us will soon forget.


                                               There were several challenges, but also some silver linings and lessons
                                               learned. When things starting going south in March, my team and I analyzed
                                               a number of possible scenarios to prepare for the hopes of the course
                                               opening. Courses in Saskatchewan opened first and I remember looking at
                                               their plans for some guidance. In May, when the Ontario government said
                                               courses in our province could open under certain protocols, we had two
                                               days to get ready. I remember thinking, thinking, ‘We are ready,’ but not for
                                               exactly what the government outlined.
                                                                                                                                     Normally, we could park 20 carts at a time outside the   they might only get in a couple of holes, but they still
                                               Following these protocols and procedures, and guided by Brad’s                        Pro Shop. This year we only parked eight, so my staff   enjoyed themselves.
                                               leadership, we determined what we thought would be safe and work well                 were constantly getting more carts to fill in the holes.
                                               at Westmount. The Pro Shop only had 16-20 people on the property at any               This kept people from jumping into a cart that they   LESSONS LEARNED
                                               one time between the range, putting green, pro shop, parking lot and the              might dirty without us knowing and that would need to   One of the other things we learned, which I think we
                                               first tee. That gave members a sense of safety since they weren’t bumping             be considered cross-contaminated.                    might consider carrying forward to next year, was an
                                               into each other. Initially, members could not use the locker room, so we                                                                   alternative way to run some events. Whether it was
                                               individually helped them get stuff.                                                   TEE TIMES                                            a ladies, mens or mixed event, instead of a midday
                                                                                                                                     There have been a lot of challenges with the tee sheet   shotgun, members picked their time, so we had people
                                               My team was constantly spraying equipment down—making sure pull carts
                                               a member just used didn’t get into the clean fleet until we had sanitized             and the lottery system this season. That was certainly   teeing off throughout the day. That might be something
                                               them, and sanitizing the riding carts before and after each use. We had to            one of the toughest things to manage. Many do not    that stays with us into the future. For example,
                                               adjust on the fly since there were a lot of unknowns. Our staff also tried to         understand how they get bumped and how the lottery   maybe we won’t have a big dinner after some of the
                                               make sure members stayed at the recommended six feet apart at all times.              works. Many members have played 20 percent more      smaller tournaments ; we’ll run selected tee times
                                               This was probably the biggest challenge, as members feel so comfortable               or double the amount of rounds than normal, so just   so participants can play when they want and we will
                                               and safe at the Club and happy to be here.                                            getting people onto the golf course was often an issue.   probably get a bigger participation rate.
                                                                                                                                     That said, we had members tee off at 7 p.m., knowing

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