Rowboats have replaced golf carts, greens are submerged and three holes have formed into one giant lake at Meadowbrook Golf Course, one of two Minneapolis public golf courses the city might be forced to close for the season.
It could cost the city nearly $1 million in revenue if Meadowbrook and Hiawatha, two of its most popular golf courses, have to stop operations.
The two were closed to the public in mid-June after relentless rain caused Minnehaha Creek to spill onto fairways, rendering them unplayable. Dozens of indoor workers were laid off and golfers were forced to tee off elsewhere.
"The whole place looks like a lake," said Paul Schmidt, the lone attendant at Meadowbrook, as he surveyed the waterlogged course Wednesday. "It's devastating."
The city rented pumps and bought sandbags to limit the damage, but the greens were too wet for play.
Hiawatha was able to pump out most of its standing water, but Meadowbrook wasn't so lucky. Fifteen of the course's 18 holes are submerged — the worst under 8 to 10 feet of water — and maintenance workers need rowboats to reach certain parts of the course. Three holes are now connected in one giant body of water, filled with algae.
And the condition is not expected to change soon.
"We're kind of at the mercy of Mother Nature right now," said Sara Ackmann, who heads golf, ice and winter programs at the Park and Recreation Board. "It's really timing and luck at this point."