Kikuyu Golf Project - Golf Lessons, Golf Tournaments, and Golf News

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This customer received 49 logo designs from 32 designers. They chose this logo design from Iris 3 as the winning design.
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Logo Design Brief
We want to give golfers an immersive golf experience. The Kikuyu Golf Experience will give golfers access to a digital magazine published six times per year, tournaments to play in, and instruction.
So, why is this a grass worth talking about? Because it’s different than the Bermuda, bentgrass, zoysia and Kentucky bluegrass that you’ll see at most PGA Tour venues. Kikuyu is a spongy turf, and it has an uncanny ability to stop balls dead in their tracks. On other grasses, a fairway-wood approach that lands just short of the green could well bound through the putting surface, into a bunker or rough. With Kikuyu, it could well bounce one yard forward before stopping completely. Bump-and-runs around the greens are virtually impossible; chips have to land on the putting surfaces, which feature a different (and yet equally polarizing) grass in Poa annua. We’ll save the Poa conversation for another time.
As far as the rough goes, Kikuyu giveth, and Kikuyu taketh away. It’s a dense grass, so often times a ball will often sit up on top of the rough, almost on a tee, which leads to some serious flyer lies. But it can also nestle down to the bottom, forcing guys to grip the club extra tight to prevent the grabby Kikuyu from closing the clubface. The best you can do from one of these lies is to hack it out and hope it chases on the green—even though, as previously discussed, that’s probably not going to happen.
The strategy, as always, is to keep the ball in the fairway, where Kikuyu is its friendliest.
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Kikuyu Golf
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