My dad sent along a post to me written by Jennifer Torres.
I emailed my dad and asked him to post the following on your forum.
When I was little - even as young as three - Big Ron took me on the golf course. My favorite memories are riding in the "Go - Buggy" at night. I still don't know the real name for that thing.... the smell of wet grass, fresh cut grass, the feeling that I had this BIG BACK YARD or at least access to one that no other kids did. I liked seeing that not every job involved working 9 to 5 and going in an office. Watching my dad work on a golf course gave me a sense that was different than maybe if I had been taken to a standard "corporate" environment.
I got the sense that your life can be work and work can be life in a very easily interwoven way. It seemed like work wasn't a "chore" or something my dad "had" to do - if you asked me back then I probably would have just told you that for some reason my dad hops in this cart and changes cups and tee markers, replaces divots, secures the course, takes the flags out of the pole and rests them on the green, re-rakes the sand traps, refills the soda machines at the golf club, locks up, etc. because he wants to.
And it's never a bad thing to get to spend some time outside in the fresh air at night instead of watching TV. From my dad taking me on the course, it gave me an understanding that there is a lot of intuition and science involved with the art of being a superintendent - there's a lot to manage at once. To this day I get angry when I see home owners automatic sprinklers turn on on their front lawns at noon. Grass should be watered before sunrise so that the water doesn't evaporate before it soaks the root!!!" I think to myself.
And I think that the members always like seeing kids taking an interest in golf and it helps superintendent member relationships, no? The golf course members may not yell at the superintendent that his/her slow greens are ruining their game if the superintendent's kid is standing there.

AND being the child of a superintendent just makes the movie Caddyshack THAT much more special.
Jen Kirkman
Hollywood, CA
Daughter of Ron Kirkman, superintendent at Needham Golf Club, Needham, MA since 1961 - retired now.