 So, yeah, we just printed out our application schedule for everybody. It's basically, well, for all stock for you, Greek, basically the same as it has been in the years past, we're going to start the last week of March and do our verification there. We're just going to solid-time the greens that hasn't been in play, hardly since, you know, October was a little busy, November, December, February, all that hasn't had any play. So, we're just going to solid-time and try to get down low and sort of break up that stuff down deep. It's really helped in the last couple of years with the little guys dry spot, those little dry marks that you see around the greens we've been really cut back on those last few years. So, I think that's a big part of it, is getting down deep and loosening that stuff up before or down there. It hasn't been done, you know, that so many years before the last two or three. So, I think it's helped. And then we'll just go, you know, monthly with our solid-times, little needle-times and support for the holes in there. Pretty much good to go the next day, next afternoon or something. And we'll do teas in the spring, teas in the fall. We'll probably get out and do approaches in the spring with pulling the pores out of those and then we'll get around and clean up those. And then ruffs and rope-okers are just here around with the air-move machine. Just try to slice it. Try to get fairways as much as you can. It's a little harder than the machine's slow, and you've got a lot of acres of fairways out there. So, but yeah, we'll plug it away. And then we'll go and get into fall. If you're still kind of debating, it's either going to be the last week of September or the first week of October. We're just trying to figure out a few tournaments and then we need to work around those two things. So, same thing in the fall. We'll just probably solve the time and maybe pull a little pending course with him, but it'll be about the same as the spring. A lot of sand. The geese have really done a lot of work for 12 this year. So, we've got to fill in some holes there. So, we'll get a lot of sand and greens in the spring. Ryan's going to talk about the air-move machine in the fall. Who's going to talk about the air-move machine in the fall? Yeah, so I'll do the Twin Peaks and Sunset air-move schedule. So, I'll start with Sunset, and the ladies are in the packets if ever we'll print it out the entire sheet. But, so, the Sunset are going to be doing a very similar air-move schedule this year, starting towards the end of March, middle of March, depending on what the weather looks like. We'll start out with our fairways and roughs given out there and trying to make some holes, reduce some compaction. Last year, we're at both courses, we're successfully able to air-move all the greens, all the trees, all the surrounds, and all of the fairways, which has been a couple of years since we've been able to get it all done. So, this year we're going to go after it again and try to get them all done again in the spring and the fall. But, as far as the greens go, we'll start out on April 5th in Sunset weather permitting, doing the full course aeration, and we're going to go with Holokines, just a small half inch, just under half inch ID, so just about the size of my pin. Fill them up with sand, put some fertilizer down, same thing at Twin Peaks in the spring, we'll be going the week after on April 11th. Due to, you've noticed over the past year, there hasn't been as good a percolation and filtration of the greens at Twin Peaks in Sunset, so this year the goal is to open them up and get as much fresh sand in them as we can to reduce some of the black layer that's been growing over the year through last year with all the play we had. I believe I discussed some about it last year when I did my course presentations. So, this year we're going to be attacking that, and then once the longer throughout the summer we'll be using the meal times like New Creek does to open up the greens to get some air flowing through them, just the ones that will be healed up by the next day. Within this fall, we'll be doing the full course aeration on September 13th for Sunset, which is a week later than usual, just because it falls, the usual day falls on the same week as Labor Day, and it's already a short week so we don't want to make it any shorter than we need to, and it'll give the course some more time to heal up, and then also the day before on September 12th we'll be going at Twin Peaks, and that day we'll be going, we'll be opening up to two times at 2.30 in the afternoon, which reminds me, so at sunset we'll be closed all day because we have the cross country meet, so we're just doing solid times in the fall, which will be closed all day for the cross country meet, but Twin Peaks will be using the same times, but we'll be hoping later that afternoon because we won't be doing as big an impact to the greens. So let's speed, a few rolls, a little bit of sanding is in the fertilizer, so I'm going to leave the same view in the fall while we're trying to get BTs, fairways and ruffs, airing it also to get ready for the winter. Yeah, that's the aeration plan for all three courses this year. Now we just need the weather to cooperate with us. Yeah, let's do frost. Okay. Tim, and so we started at the bottom of the agenda, not knowing if other board members were going to come, so we're going to do reorg, just so you guys were hoping to do this race between meetings. All right. Okay, so we're going to do a little presentation on frost and kind of what causes frost and the reasons we do what we do to keep golfers off of the course during frost. I'm not a scientist. I don't know the exact science behind it. I found a pretty good article that really dumps it down for people like me who not a scientist that can't explain the in-depth of it. So I just put out some slides and we'll just kind of go through them and if you guys have any questions, we'll try to answer the best we can. If not, we'll Google it. So where does frost come from? It's formed by dew that forms on the planet night when there is no solar energy to replace radiation at night as the leaf cools then the water, the leaf plant isn't able to hold the water so it comes outside of the plant and forms on the leaf blade. So this causes the water to appear and then when the temperatures drop low enough it'll turn into frost. Most of the water vapor comes from the soil and when it's wet and the air is dry this helps to drive the moisture up through the grass. So when you have you know moisture in the soil then it comes up through the plant and it comes on the outside and then when it gets cold enough then it starts to form frost. Why does frost form when air temperature is above freezing? So this again has to do with the infrared radiation, you know, no sunlight. At night the earth emits heat into space and the sun isn't there to replace it and cools the surface. Since cooler air is more dense it remains closer to the grass, you know, so it's a lot cooler down right at the grass place than it is, you know, way up here. So as it goes it pushes that colder air down so that's what helps, you know, get the frost, your air temperature, I think I have it in this right, but their air temperatures that they take out of, you know, airports or your thermometers wherever you go are always taking way up high and so it's a lot cooler down at the grass level and stuff like that. So that's why we we get, you know, eventually the air will cool to the frost point and frost will form because the air cannot pull as much water and then the frost will form. So the longer nighttime periods in the spring and fall you get more cooling since there's more time to for that to lose energy, you know, that's kind of obvious, you know, makes pretty much sense, you know, the longer it's colder, you know, the more chance you have frost and as we get into the fall and, you know, temperatures are lower and that's why it's hard for us to decide when we want to water in the fall because we know we're going to make frost, we're going to make ice, but we want to get the gulfers started too, but sometimes you just have to water so we kind of fight back and forth with what we want to do, but some days we just have to start tea times a little later knowing that we're going to have some frost. Um frosty weather, air temperature alone cannot be used to predict frost. For frost, to form air temperature and leaf temperature must fall into the frost point, which, you know, like I said, it's not always 32 degrees or below it can, what we usually look at is about 40 degrees. If that's 40 degrees or below, there's probably going to be frost just because the temperature diversions in the different areas there to take. And also, you could go all night and be clear and right when the sun comes up, the temperature drops just a few degrees and you can have frost form right as the sun rises in the morning. So sometimes we could chill out in this little dark out and you perfectly find, we're having to call our crew off the course, especially in the fall, we're so used to going right away and just like that there's frost, just that little bit of different temperature in the morning when the sun comes out. Yeah, the sun temperature, the sun will push that colder down right to the grass and then we get the frost. So same thing, the dew point pressure is different between the dew point and the air temperature. The greater the pressure, the more cooling is needed for frost to form. So that's just kind of, you know, one of those things where it's just the balance of in between how it's going to form that day. So different weather and environmental factors affect the amount of cooling at night. So I think the next slide will show, yeah, some of the other factors. So if you want to go ahead. Yeah, so one of the first factors is sky cover. So clouds, so if it's cloudy out, there's a good chance there won't be frost just because the clouds act like a blanket to keep that overnight temperature up. The sustained air temperature through the night and also minimize the temperature difference between the surfaces and space which slows the cooling at night. So if we have most frosty nights come on cool, clear nights outside where we know we have a cloudy night, we have a good chance of no frost in the next one. Next would be the dew point. So the air temperature where the air is completely saturated with water vapor. So we have an increase in humidity was again, more better chance of being frosty morning. Daylight, so longer night periods may have allowed for the air to be the cool and the frost point. Frost would like to be formed on that cold, clear, calm night. So more chances to be cool, more better chance for frost in the next morning. So we take all of these and there's more on the next page, but we'll take all of this in consideration with tea time, tournaments, whatever, we know something's happening like that. Something's happening or bringing the water to be a really cool, clear night. You can kind of pick a guess and help plan for those times where maybe a little bit of delay in the next morning. Yeah, that's why we bump the tea times back, especially for daylight, but it's also because of frost, you know, because we start to move forward this time of the year and start to get earlier and earlier, we play golf sooner and sooner. So wind, I kind of like the cloud cover wind will help prevent the frost, even that air from being, keep in the cool air or the warm air down with the cool air off, so it doesn't keep down to the grass, then topography, so the low areas will be the first to develop frost as the cool award ends air settles in these areas. So this one is a good one. If you golf very much at sunset, you'll notice that it could be perfectly fine up on the number one tea at the clubhouse, but we're waiting on frost because down the number one green, you can down lower, there's frost down there. So if this shows how much just a little bit of change in elevation of the area and create the frost. Also on morning height, frost forms heavily in the higher road turf. This happens because the far away turf is closer to the warm soil, which is radiating heat upwards. So the longer grassways help keep in the cool up at the top, the cooler ones will allow the warm air to come up, really being a lot less frost in the rough areas of the golf course. The roughs are usually what, she slows everybody down because greens usually don't get frost unless it's really cold. It has to be really cold where you want it at night, but the roughs, they'll get it at 40 to 32 degrees almost guaranteed. So all right, so the frost in the morning, you know, even though the sun's rising in the air, the air temperature continued to decline. That's what I was talking about, which it pushes the cold air down and that's what causes our frost right as the right as the sun's coming up. That's usually the time that we know we're going to get frost and that's like the coldest time of the day too is right about there. So even though the temperature is 40, the air is core conductor of heat and the frost will will be slow to melt into due, which you know that we can play, but it's that whole thing of the cold air staying lower. So it also takes additional energy to change ice back to water, increase in the time that it's that the frost stays around, you know, so kind of basic science there, you know, instead of when we tried to base it as soon as it came. So yeah, that's what keeps it around. That's a good picture. So basically this last slide here kind of sums it all up and gives an explanation of why we have frost delays and why we want to keep the golfers off the grass. So basically walking on or driving on frost cover causes the plant to break and cell walls to rupture. So basically the frost, all that moisture inside that leaf blade, once someone steps on it, when it gets frosty it freezes, and when it gets stepped on, it explodes and damages the inside of that, the cells of that plant. So the cells will use the ability to function normally and then damage can be seen within 40 to 72 hours later after the plant leaves turn brown and die. So this picture down here is a good example that I found, so this is one I just found off of, so this is not a real world scenario from here, but all these brown marks around here in the screen, that's all forest damage. So that can be seen from the reaping of the turf and making it more susceptible to disease and weeds. So basically these areas here, the grass blades have died and will stay like that until they can grow back. So what happens in the frost, it could be all through the winter, but this damage stays through. We're in the spring, it would peel back a little more. And if you see someone where it happens right that day, you'll see these footprints would be black spots on the grass, and this is what happens in about 14 to 72 hours afterwards. Can you do anything to stimulate that grow back if you happen to have it? It's pretty much the damage is there and all the growth back would be coming up from the plants down below or around them. So it's all that you can do. No, you just got to wait for it to grow up and mow it off. I mean you can get up there and help it out. In the spring it won't be as though it's small because we're in the growing season and it'll come back quick, but in the fall, I'm guessing from this picture with the way it looks in the back, it's probably in the fall, everything's going dormant. So eventually this will be less than when the green goes more dormant, but you'll see it again in the spring and then at the time it does happen to grow itself back once the ones around it get healthy. Any questions? Yes? Yes, you can only talk, it's around 90 done of course. How do you make the decision that the frost has gone up? So basically you can do the step test or you kind of wipe the plant blade. So basically when the frost is there, if you step down or press on the plant, it'll stay pushed down and we're looking for the plant to spring back which means that the cells, the moisture inside of the cells are starting to thaw out and the grass blade will pop back. Or another way to see it is if you take your hand and wipe it across the frost. If you wipe it and it still looks like ice sickles, then you still have a ways, but once it starts to melt, or if you ever hear someone at the clubhouse say the frost is starting to loosen up, you go and take your hand across it and you'll see it like you're kind of wiping the frost off your windshield when it warms up in the morning. So basically you're looking for that plant to bounce back when you put it away to work. Well it's given a little bit longer than we should because the deeper down it gets, you can't really tell if it gets deep down into like the root of the plant down there and then you can still have that damage and you might not be able to see it. So we always like to just give it a few answers. You know maybe 10 minutes or something like that really helps out. So I have a quick question from Osmo. I did not know this I saw your presentation so I pictured it. I thought it was just a brain since my address. So you know I mean now that we know this, we can know it deep down. I know this now because most of the time people just stand around complaining because it's frost away and we don't really know where it is. Yeah these guys have heard every single pros gets on the air. Really they do. That slide right there is pretty good. They're in touch with great graphs and maybe put that up. And then my real question, how many do we have? I don't play anymore. How many what? How many frost waves do we have? It's almost daily. It's usually, I think this year was mid-October, mid-October. We start to really see it and then it kind of lightens up in that margin. Yeah I would say 10. And the trees don't help us. The trees are not good. Definitely in sunset it's more rough I guess you'd say because the south side, 3 through 8, it could be clear as all can be and it's only number two that's holding us up because it faces to the north, this time of year. And the trees don't help us because it's washing more of the sunlight and it takes a lot longer and it really it really hinders us some days but what do you do? So here's our, I put that into a laminated piece and on top so I just set it like that. It's not a bad idea, you know. The article that Dan used was a published one that we could, it's included in all the four packets. I think the picture shows everything. Yeah I mean just that whole slide could be you know just set on the counter because everybody has those little lacquers that we could use but I had no idea. And you've been playing golf forever right? It's usually not the green you know that's why we can kind of get out there before that's why you'll see us get out first because we can get out and mow the green while the fairways and rubs are still. Well the other piece that I can speak from experience too, we have no idea when it's going to stop or whenever there's a way to go down. Yeah. It's all around that like Dan mentioned a few slides back at 40 degree mark once we get at 40 everything starts to melt off but sometimes we get there we're pressed and let it out to 40 then a cloud of ink comes in and it kind of slows it down. So it's a little different question. There's a group of people who play very much better than me. But everywhere in this you just take green from that all the time or they don't they get it they get it now. The vast majority of the golfers now in the mornings they understand. And you know they've come to just accept it. The guys have been real good at about letting the range be open. So they go out people go out and fall that at least keeps them occupied and then once it's finally once it's finally off and we send it but most people really do understand if you play in the mornings they know. They're pretty good about this time because we're so used to starting early in the summer and all of a sudden we get that weather changes. All of a sudden you can't golf right first thing in the morning. And I just remind you there's summer warmers in other suits. Clouds are good. Clouds are good if we get them at night but if a cloud rolls in right after the sun puts that frost down there then we could be who knows. I think I was here and I thought I was going to start at the one time. Oh yeah. We've had days out when one of those layer clouds comes in just exactly what they just described and then it didn't warm up that day and we actually never opened. There's been days where we didn't open at all because frost stayed on all day. It never got above 30 degrees all day. The cloud actually didn't work as a blanket this time. It worked to keep that cold air in. Especially if you watered that night or two. It's going to come up and then it doesn't and then you're okay. Well we might be shut down today. So yeah this is a great article. It was written by he used to be a professor at Nebraska and now he's a superintendent and just does a ton of stuff for just golf. But yeah really good article. But I found it that day. I looked a lot from this article too. I mean I knew the idea of it but the science behind it was right here so that was great. Anything else? Any questions? Well done. All right let's reorder. Going back to the agenda item two. He's going to let you chair, volunteer to be chair. Oh come on guys. I want a big word of thanks. You didn't know any one of them. For an editor I told my aunt she needed to be a chair of course. That's why she's not here. It's been an holiday. Thanks. So take the boat. All in favor of John be chair. Say aye. Aye. Raise your hands. Good chair gone. Go for it. Okay. This year. This year elected vice chair. Any nominations? Any volunteers? Anybody volunteers? Please. Take a look. I guess she would do that. Zero points last year. Right. So many nominations for Ann. Ann the big one. Sorry about that. All in favor say aye. Aye. All opposed. Congratulations Ann. Don't skip a meeting with us. Don't skip a meeting with us. Don't skip a meeting with us. Don't skip a meeting with us. Don't skip a meeting with us. Agenda. Are there any changes to the agenda? Second. Second. Motion has been made. Seconded. All in favor. Say aye. All opposed. Agenda. Any corrections to the previous minutes? Many months ago. Okay. If there are no corrections. So the motions are temporary. Oh, there's a. And it has been seconded. All in favor of the minutes. As is. Say aye. All opposed. All in favor. There's no public. Here today. Whatever is on that. Communications, golf, professional, monthly, time monthly. What's that? Three monthly in a quarter. Sure. Well, I'll go first. Mine's fairly easy. Unfortunately. Projected for Jane Mary. We'll go back to. Since we're almost done with February now. $9,697 was projected. Actual revenue came in at $695. No rounds at all. You can probably figure out why. It's been a much longer winter than we had in a few years. Last year for sure. Pass that. But it's been rough. We're ready. We're dying to be open. We'll be honest. Pete got open yesterday. Kind of. So, Xamarin got open yesterday. Walking only. Who's carts? What carts are outside? What cart? Any questions? Sunset. I'll do it to the pizza. I'll do it to the pizza. I'll do it to the pizza. To the pizza. You know. Some guy accidentally booked in. In 2022 there. That's how we made that $34. We didn't. We got that. Anyway, it's the same thing. We were closed both months. We did get open yesterday, which was nice. I saw a couple of season passes last week. So we're having a smoke in February right now. Compared to last year. We made absolutely zero. We did get a few rounds in today. We got open yesterday. Walking only out there. It's dry enough now that we can get carts on. Pretty much emptied all the moisture out of it today. Of course. I'm pleased because. Starting the year. Last year I looked out the window. Putting green. And you can tell where every hole in putting green was. Because of all the wear and tear. We got last November of 21. And December of 21. We were open all the way until we had the buyer. Marshall fire. Yeah. So we were open all that time, basically. And have, you know, a record breaking fall. Record breaking. November, December. Of course, just got absolutely washed. They got to a place where we talked about paying people and not having to play. Just close it. So now if you look out at the putting green. You can't see where one hole is. As the grass has basically been preserved. We have a lot of green. It's basically been preserved. We have fairly limited play in November and very limited play in December. And none in January or February. So, you know, with all the hard work Ryan's doing. I think golf course is going to come out of the winter months really good. And I think you creep. You creep is on the verge of doing cart path only in the fall. And their reports the same thing. They did nothing the last few months. Except the last few days. They were on the verge of doing cart path only in the fall. And I think that email even went out. It did. And that course inspired snow to come. Perfect. And we would cart path after that. So, you know, now they're back open and cart path only, which is good to get started. Yeah. We don't have a lot of growth yet. Although it is, if you look close, you can see green grass. There's green under there. And the trees are falling. Without falling. They're going to come out of the winter much better than we did last year. Much better. The only problem might be once we get out there we might find a little damage. Ryan and Dan could explain this better. A little damage from the ice layer is that that initial snow was what took so long to get rid of. Was so wet. And then it got so cold after that we had two, three inches of ice for the longest time. You know, freeze, thaw, freeze, thaw. And that's not good at some point with the grass because it's not getting oxygen and it's not getting enough light. So, hopefully we don't have a lot of those spots but I'm sure there's going to be some of those spots. We're good. I drove, of course, today and looked at all the greens. We don't have any damage from the ice. But it makes you not slip too well, Dan. You know it's up. And that's why we got up in late January. I think maybe early February and pushed as much snow off as we could. Snowblowers tractors to help it out faster. So, we got it down to that ice layer and then that helps move it thaw out. Then you really need one good 60 degree day with wind and that ice layer will go just like that. But it needs to be if there's three, four inches of snow on top of that layer, you can't and it won't come off fast enough. And then it freezes again. I was surprised that pushed the flag five inches into the ground. So, they're really thawed out. It is good. We don't need to start Walmart until February. Exactly. The same thing after verification. Oh, you're terrified. Yeah, you do. Yeah. Like I said earlier, 12 green geese just they just attack that thing so bad and they peck, peck, peck and dig it down past the roots of the plants. We'll have a new plan for that next year. And to that end about all three golf courses the geese were a legitimate issue. We have probably 200 in today's year around just a few weeks. And when you're out playing and you see a green and they've gone to the restroom all over the grass that's not fun. But you'll see holes like this where they will just stay in one spot and go and just literally take a hole out like that big or bigger in the greens. That's what those are. Those are the geese taking those up. So, they are a legitimate problem. It would be great if someone could figure out what we could do about it. It's a tough one. So, it's going to take a while I haven't figured out how to do this crap. I've got a tree piece from my house today. And I don't live too far from here. How did you do last year? Twin Peaks had record year with 1.3 0.7 and then 3.5 0.8 Yeah, 1.9 million we were at two weeks short of hit the new man's number. Okay, yeah, we hit our magic number, and we were fairly lucky at St. Pete's. We hit our magic number, but we actually, because of that fall, where we didn't have a good December and January or December and November, in October wasn't that great either, y'all remember, it wasn't very great October. Our rounds went down, just in those months, just in the shoulder season months, that's where we lost a lot of rounds. But because we had adjusted our fees last year dynamically upwards, we still made, we still made our numbers and then some over, over prior year, which was a record year that year. Does that sound so stupid? Anything else? No, nothing, it's already increasing. Is that form easier for everybody to read with the lines? Yeah, I like the name. Yeah, totally. Thank you to Danny for doing that. Yeah, I'm glad to see you. Better than to see you at a restaurant, okay. Yeah, thanks, absolutely. There is no holding business, and you'll see new businesses for you. That is, yeah, I guess the first thing you have to do is decide where we're going to be. It's coming here, it's proposed to be here at six o'clock in the morning. Is anything, I don't know if I'm sure about it. It's not the last Monday, it doesn't have to be Monday. I know it's the same as they all can go back. No, it's just always been on Mondays. It might be open to a little bit of a day. It's all weekend, it's the same as they all go back, all the other guys have it. It cannot be on Tuesdays. I often have to go and Tim would never be able to be here. It doesn't matter to me, but I just want to think about it. I think from my standpoint, Mondays is probably the best for this building. Simply because during the summer months when we do have meetings, we have weeks. And I, you know, so couldn't do Tuesdays, which now pushes us to Wednesdays. And Wednesday evening at this time there are 30 to 50 ladies in here in the sweet spot. I'll be drinking and partying and having a great time. I appreciate it. I think for the facility, Mondays is probably the best night. It was my day off too. Six o'clock, okay. So we made a motion that we maintain our present schedule. So. All in favor of me or my support Monday at six o'clock. Both. Um. This is for posting. That's the golf course advisory board. And we post those on the city website. We'll need you to pass the motion agreeing with that. Um, do we? Should we also say that certain period of time? No, it's all dictated by city course. Sorry there. Yeah. The agenda. So we sent the motion. All in favor of the post in the DCA, the agenda. Hi. What she cares. So. The post calendar was in your packet. Generally staff has outlined some of the things that go on during the year. If you all have other things that you would like to talk about, we'd like to hear that and we can cross those into the calendar as well. Or you can approve it as presented. I'm not going to approve that. What's the main incentive to accept the schedule. And the items on the schedule. I don't have the answer to something that comes up. Yes, they can. All in favor of this schedule. I will open the motion here. Let's see. So I didn't throw the staff. I didn't throw the staff. I didn't actually have one. Oh, sorry. Sorry. All three golf courses have gotten new upgraded one sale software. And as customers hear about it, some of them try to check in and it's taken a little longer than normal. We have the same software since 2009. So this is not the same. It's much different. It's going to take some time for everyone to get comfortable with it. And no matter how much we train them, the training on the fly is what's going to cost everyone to learn how to run it. So when you check in, John, if you check in, look out and say hi, my name is John. Hey, they make a tee time. Give them your first name and your last name because we're typing it in. We got to look it up and then we can make the tee time from there. I think once everybody gets it, it's going to be really good. The computers finally talk all three golf courses. So if Phillip buys a pass at sunset, that pass is now going to populate as a sunset twin peaks or a three course pass for all three courses. That is great. So there's a lot of really good in it, but there's going to be literally I'm on day two with it. Brian and I were talking before the meeting about how are we going to report these things and this and that and everything else. So we're figuring it all out and just kind of bear with ourselves. But people in New York people talking about it, it's a big learning curve. So it wouldn't place just a couple days. The actual installation was last Tuesday. It went live, I think. It went live Wednesday or Thursday. Wednesday or Thursday because I could look at it online. And it's a cloud based system. So Sam, Keith and I can actually adjust something if we're off. I'm off on a day and I don't want to travel to golf course. I know I can log in and I can change. Exactly. I can fix it all the time. But it is a concept that didn't meet my self meaning today. But it's kind of, it's definitely learning curve. I mean for me and I, I'm not with you. Especially if it's the fact that we aren't using it at all. And that's going to be the thing is, like you said, we're learning on the fly and we won't be able to learn on the fly until you guys are coming in. Right. I haven't had anybody check in for a tee time yet. But I will find out tomorrow how easy, complicated or frustrating it could be. But it's going to be. It's the way it is. I mean that's what we're learning when we move on. After two days I feel a lot better. But I didn't sleep very good. I lost a few days. Just, it's, it's, you know, and then I got to get everyone trained. And I only got, most of my guys that worked for me are y'all's age. And what was that for me? Take it for what it is. I got one young kid that worked for me. It was 21. Oh my goodness. And then I showed him all the all the modules and I'm like, learn all those and then teach me. And he will. Within five minutes he goes, okay, here's how you do this and here's how you do that. And I'm, you know, learning, you know, because they've grown up in it. A lot of us, you know, we have not. And it's way different. Keith, why do you have a driving range out there? Why? Why do you have a driving range out there? Why? Why do golf courses offer driving here? Why? That was your question. Oh crap. To get better. What's the equivalent of your driving range? Is there what? Well, they have, they have a training mode, but it's not, I'm not going to say I love the training mode. So they don't have it. And the training mode has to slip in and out of live mode. So yeah. And if you have a training mode, you have to go back and forward it out. Otherwise it will process. The next day. That may be some feedback to whoever, so. Oh, it's already been given. Yes, we've already. Yeah. So to answer your question, the training mode is, is key. Not out there on the bus and team right now, but covering over someone's shoulder, patiently walking in the process, and learning the software. And that's why it was really nice today when Carter came in. I showed him one time. This is how it works. This is what we do. Okay. I go into a little billiard and I look in the background and see if he's doing everything. Perfect. Well, you know, I, I buy the manual pass. And my client is sensitive. Over here. You know, my client here is sensitive. And then they ask me, and of course I tell them about all the love. I tell them about this person, but not to myself. Geez. Yeah. So the old system too, we have a lot of names. So you could have been under John Hay, John Hay's, John Hay, a different one. Golf maps mean all that for us. We cleaned up our data. Everything is, if I type in John Hay right now, they shouldn't have one person. Even if I go in to create a new you, because I don't know who you are, I'm saying, and didn't know you were in there, it will, it'll pop up saying, they already have this, because you have to put an email or a phone number associated with it. And it won't let you do the 999, 999 outings or the 7s. So. Well, yeah. It's worse than that. The old software, if John has his pass, and then he, he signs into the portal online and he books a tee time online. It changed his probe. It'll change the old software, it'll change his profile from a Twin Peaks five day pass holder to an internet customer. So then he comes in and so instead of us just clicking, double-clicking his name, and having it populate the tee sheet with his pass rate, it populates it with the full rate. The guy behind the counter doesn't know what's gonna be done. So this now, it's really nice from that standpoint. If you have a membership now, it comes up right underneath your name. Remember, I go to the shopping cart, it puts the fee for that moment right there in there, and it's this. Schemals. Yeah, let me ask you this. I call in, and you're busy, so I get transferred to the answer center. The answer center. The answer center. The answer center, so what happens then? It's just, you would book the tee time and fill with them. It could be, your name would still populate because they're still pulling to our database. If anything, is our database. If anything, L, anything that should make this easier. Because if I walked over and showed you right now, I could make a tee time off. Other than typing up your name, I can click two clicks in a tee time's name. So those folks who are booking the tee times, that are offsite when we don't get our workshops, that are answering 24 hours a day, that are offsite somewhere else, they should have a much easier time because there are less duplicates and there are less click-throughs with this song. So, that should make golf now answers much better. And I would agree, it was off the last year and I filed every complaint we could. And then they put their best people and that didn't help much either. But I do think it will help. So that was, I just want to explain that. So if you hear people talking about it and I'm trying to train right now, I'm trying to educate the customers. Because they're so used to just coming in and us, you know, pretty much making it real easy for them because we know everybody. And now it's going to, there's some re-learning going on with the customers. Even though you think we know, give us your first name, give us your last name, spell it correctly, because if it isn't spelled correctly, okay? And then if Chuck Davis is working, I say mind you, he can't hear. So it's important to make sure that the customers know that they give us the right information, we can get it through there much quicker. So is there any benefit to stop by with other courses and just check and say, hey, can I verify my profile? Sure. Absolutely. And then we'll be good. Absolutely. So I want of course to do that. Yeah, okay. So that was it. That was my only answer. Good information. Any items from... So I have four things that I forgot to create. One, I was at the Golf X one, this is the people from the CJA, the Power of Golf Association. And I wasn't aware of this, but when you have a CJA membership, you're going to fill it out. It's actually what the course is yours. So I chose the virtual course of D. Creek, because I know who's playing there the most. And apparently, you get these for that, you get something from them for that, what's the goal? From the CJA, the course is yours. If a player shows them that, is there a home course? I don't think we get anything in a sense. It just goes into our list of members. We actually have. We have paid for them. We pay to be members of that whole system. Yeah, the CJA. So if you don't mind what I've been folding all the time, if you just go on Jin's website and sign up to me, you have Jin hanging out. And you have to select a home course. If you select D. Creek, for instance, you are in their database. So when, whoever the president is over there, right now, other men's club goes to do a, or the treasurer, one goes to renew the membership. They will either delete everybody and just have everyone start over and you guys will have to pay them directly. Or you will automatically be renewed and you'll have to pay D. Creek in a sense, but it's not how it, we don't auto renew anybody. I get to see that chat. We did. The Sunsets meant our treasurer who gets an invoice from the CJA saying, well, you had 133 men's club or had 133 members in your Jin profile. Here's an invoice that you owe us for 133 members at $35. And so, he'll audit his books and say, no, we only have X number of members right now. This is how many we're paying you for right now because nobody else is paying us. And those that didn't pay by April 15 become deactivated. You have to reactivate. It's kind of the opposite of that. Alright, this next one I have is, I don't know if it's for, who's this for, but the, stay-in money? What the city is doing with that? That's probably me. That'd be you. So any, coming our way, I was thinking more of Keith and his junior program. We're still, it's unallocated, as far as I know. There we go. I can't, I wish I could tell you. What process, if there's going to be one? What priorities do you have? So the answer to your question is, I don't know anything. That's pretty much what there are. I just heard that some folks money is unallocated. I don't know, it was money unallocated to create it. So there's a way that, you know, maybe some of the courses have been applied for some of the junior programs or some, I don't know if that's, I don't know when the city will make the decision about it. Well it won't be the city, it'll be the city council. The city council. I'll just tell my own, my own view on this is, that it's one-time money. Yeah. It's best spent on, I wouldn't support spending on the U-Pret Club, I also would. Yeah. Anything that endures, it might be to put money, it's one-time money in the program that once it's spent, it's gone and there's nothing that endures. Beyond today, there's never going to be so much money in my city. I like that. That's a good little thing. And my program's good. Anything else? I've got one more. So, you know, the thing about the process and any chance we would throw out that they are social media caramel courses? Yeah. I think that more of the people in the final slide, a lot of people have joined Facebook pages and social media and there's nothing about the city. Yeah. Yeah. I got a few other ones too that have new signs that are going to come out this year about use in the range the right way and all that sort of thing. So yeah, we can get it over to Dan. You take care while you're at social. No. There's a typo of that slide in the pipeline. Uh-oh. You can see for yourself your prom in here. The last slide? I don't know. I don't know. Mason, the second you have blues instead of blues. Broke. Oh, someone dropped it on me. I didn't get it. I was just looking for you to stop you. Do your Q-mike while you're at it. I told you we're not the smartest guys we just grew grass. Any other items? Dirtable clothes for the board. No. Looking for a general uh in case you want to get a hold of me uh my flow number is 303. No, don't don't do that with a public meeting so. Oh, yeah. Can we, you're being important. We have a good number. Oh, thank you so much. Well, thank you. This is a reminder for a journey. Come on, say hi. Hi. Hi. Thank you very much. Give us a second to after you.