Greenkeeper
A Greenkeeper is responsible for maintaining and caring for golf courses and other large grassy areas. Here are some of their key duties:
Turf Maintenance: Ensuring that greens, fairways, tees, and roughs are kept in pristine condition by mowing, aerating, and fertilizing 1.
Irrigation and Drainage: Overseeing water systems to optimize turf health while conserving resources 2.
Pest and Weed Control: Applying environmentally friendly treatments to protect turfgrass from pests and weeds 2.
Equipment Management: Operating and maintaining specialized machinery and tools 2.
Course Preparation: Setting up the course for play, including raking bunkers, repairing divots, and marking hazards 3.
Tree and Shrub Maintenance: Pruning and trimming trees and bushes to ensure they do not interfere with play 1.
Fife (/faɪf/ FYFE, Scottish English: [fɐi̯f]; Scottish Gaelic: Fìobha [ˈfiːvə]; Scots: Fife) is a council area, historic county, registration county and lieutenancy area of Scotland. It is situated between the Firth of Tay and the Firth of Forth, with inland boundaries with Perth and Kinross (i.e., the historic counties of Perthshire and Kinross-shire) and Clackmannanshire. By custom it is widely held to have been one of the major Pictish kingdoms, known as Fib, and is still commonly known as the Kingdom of Fife within Scotland. A person from Fife is known as a Fifer. In older documents the county was very occasionally known by the anglicisation Fifeshire.
Fife is Scotland's 3rd largest local authority area by population. It had a resident population of 371,340 in 2022,[2] over a third of whom live in the three principal settlements, Dunfermline, Kirkcaldy and Glenrothes. On the northeast coast of Fife lies the historic town of St Andrews, home to the University of St Andrews—the most ancient university of Scotland and one of the oldest universities in the world—and the Old Course at St Andrews, considered the world's oldest golf course.