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Dramatic video shows impact of ‘atmospheric river’ storms on Monterey Peninsula’s golf courses in California

Northern California has been battered in recent days by strong winds, rain and even snow, and there is more extreme weather on the way, according to Weather.com. Two people have died in the storms so far and more than 176,000 are without power as of Thursday evening, the site reported.

The area’s famed golf courses are not immune to what is called the atmospheric river that’s driving the storms. That’s especially so for the layouts close to the Pacific Ocean coastline as massive waves and flooding threaten golf holes. Even inland, many course operators are dealing with flooding and the effects of winds that reached 80 mph at elevation and 50 mph in San Francisco and Sacramento. It will be days before the full effects of the storm can be tallied.




Sometimes called “rivers in the sky,” atmospheric rivers are a major factor in extreme rain and snowfall in the West.

Long, narrow corridors of air heavy with moisture form when warmer air from the tropics moves toward the poles ahead of powerful storm fronts. They can carry huge amounts of water over thousands of miles.

Atmospheric rivers function much like rivers on the surface but can carry even more water than the Mississippi River.

One coastal golf club that appears to have been hit hard is Monterey Peninsula Country Club, home to two layouts – the Dunes and the Shore. Several posts to social media have shown apparent damage to the club’s Dunes Course along the water.

WATCH THE VIDEO BELOW:




Alan Shipnuck of Fire Pit Collective reported later in the day that the club anticipates being able to repair the damage to No. 14 on the Dunes Course and that the hole will be closed “for just a little while.”

There are several other famed courses exposed to the weather pounding Monterey Peninsula, including Cypress Point, Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill, the Links at Spanish Bay, even the popular municipal Pacific Grove Golf Links. Golfweek reached out to several course operators without hearing back. California Governor Gavin Newsome has declared a state of emergency, and evacuations have been issued in parts of Monterey County and other areas.

Any damage – with none reported so far – to Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill or Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s Shore Course could prove problematic for the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, the annual PGA Tour event scheduled Feb. 2-5. Pebble Beach also will be host to the U.S. Women’s Open in July.



Article originally appeared on: Golfweek.usatoday.com

2 thoughts on “Dramatic video shows impact of ‘atmospheric river’ storms on Monterey Peninsula’s golf courses in California

  1. blank

    It’s the “ocean” and you built a course at sea level LOL what were you expecting. If it doesn’t get destroyed in this lifetime it will at some other time in the future. What’s the big deal? LOL

  2. blank

    It would be nice, just once, if the cameraman could hold the damn camera still.

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