Rewilding the Golf Course

How former golf courses are being transformed from manicured lawns to vibrant habitats.

1 minute read

February 26, 2024, 11:00 AM PST

By Diana Ionescu @aworkoffiction


View of small pedestrian bridge in Prescott Preserve Palm Springs, California with palm tree oasis and mountains in background.

The Prescott Preserve in Palm Springs, California is rewilding a former golf course now managed by the Owsit Land Trust. | Oswit Land Trust / Prescott Preserve

Writing in the New York Times, Cara Buckley describes the transformation of a former golf course in Northern California, which is being transformed into a public green space known as San Geronimo Commons. The San Geronimo Golf Course shut down in 2018, leaving the land to ‘rewild’ and return to nature without landscaping or pesticides.

As Buckley explains, “A small number of shuttered golf courses around the country have been bought by land trusts, municipalities and nonprofit groups and transformed into nature preserves, parks and wetlands. Among them are sites in Detroit, Pennsylvania, Colorado, the Finger Lakes of upstate New York, and at least four in California.”

The restoration of a golf course takes more than just leaving it alone. At San Geronimo, “Floodplains will be reconnected, and a fish barrier has been removed, allowing access to more robust migratory and breeding grounds for endangered coho salmon and threatened steelhead trout. Trails are planned that would skirt sensitive habitat, making the land a publicly accessible ecological life raft, starkly different from its time as a golf course.”

Thursday, February 15, 2024 in The New York Times

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