Mike smiled sadly at all those parts, then explained that one of the continuing tasks for the crew at Silveridge was dealing with water leaks: “The pipes at Silveridge are PVC, and in the winter, when things contract and expand, that’s when problems show up.”
We asked Mike what keeps the crew busy during the offseason and he gave us a lengthy list of routine tasks, like cleaning and checking the pools every day at 5AM and the “mowing and blowing,” but Mike also described some of what goes on specifically in the offseason: “We’ll be painting the light poles and the parking stripes. We’ll get 20 to 30 tons of granite to add to the desert landscaping, and switching out the flowers. We’ll clean up the lots. And then there are the special projects.” Every summer the head of the parks’ management team, George Igualt, creates a list of improvements. (More on that when the list becomes official.)
One special project that happens annually is working on the baseball field at The Resort: “This summer we’ll add 25 tons of dirt for the infield. And this year I want to till it first, and add some sand so won’t be so compacted. Then in September we’ll plant the new grass.” The crew has also acquired a verticutter which they’ll use for the ball field and also on the grand green at Silveridge with its lawn bowling. (Mike told us that the lawn bowling grass gets cut four times, in four directions, to achieve its uniform surface.)
WHEN HE’S NOT WORKING
Because many of the people who read these articles know Mike, we should offer a brief update on his personal life. When we wrote about him in 2020, he had a second job, an office cleaning business that he ran at night. No longer. As Mike told us, “I was working 14 hour days, seven days a week – it was just too much.”
Perhaps another factor in that decision was the rekindled romance with his old high school sweetheart as she recently moved from Chicago to Mesa. It was Mike’s old flame who back in 2020 had sent Mike a classic photo, from their prom, and we gladly print it again here… |