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A recent tree-removal program opened up vistas at Oakmont and has set an example for clubs nationwide

While members of Oakmont Country Club were asleep, a small squadron of workers regularly convened at the course before daybreak, armed with high-beamed floodlights and a brigade of 20-inch chainsaws. Starting in the months prior to Oakmont’s last U.S. Open in 1994, former superintendent Mark Kuhns led a clandestine tree-removal operation, hauling along chippers and stump grinders to carefully discard evidence of their work. His crew laid topsoil and fresh sod over the leftover hole, while high-powered vacuums and large tarps hid any traces of sawdust or debris.

Between 1993 and 1995, Oakmont’s moonlight operation thrived under the darkness of secrecy. In the morning, members would not notice that a handful of trees had disappeared. But as his crew sliced deeper through the overgrown vegetation, Kuhns gradually exposed distant sight lines and hidden ground features of Henry (H.C.) Fownes’ masterpiece long before the membership detected any changes.

“It was our tree work between holes 12 and 13 that gave us away,” recalls Kuhns. “As we reduced a single-file row of pin oaks from 10 down to about three, members started asking questions.”

The program, authorized by ex-golf chairman Mark Studer and his green committee, caused an uproar at the club. Some senior members signed petitions and wrote letters of protest. Tree preservers took inventory of all remaining trees with panoramic photography. There were threats of lawsuits, alleging that tree removal would jeopardize Oakmont’s status as a National Historic Landmark. Members held town hall meetings and even prayers for the trees at local churches.

After a while, popular opinion started to turn and the cutting continued. “Members gradually stopped grumbling and learned to appreciate our original look,” Studer says. “Some even started taking credit for it.”


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