A clutch of large blue and yellow autonomous mowers from what then was a largely unknown company called FireFly Automatix spoke volumes about the future of golf course maintenance as they silently mowed fairways at the PGA Tour's 2024 Black Desert Championship in Ivins, Utah.
The emergence of large-area autonomous mowers by FireFly Automatix was the most viewed story on TurfNet in 2025.
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FireFly Automatix caught the attention of the golf world when its autonomous large-area mowers showed up at a PGA Tour event. FireFly Automatix photo FireFly Automatix was founded in 2008 when Steve Aposhian and a small group of fellow mechanical engineers began fabricating replacement parts for sod harvesters on Aposhian’s family’s turf farm in Salt Lake City. They began selling the high-quality parts to other sod farms and later began building their own harvesters.
"We were the first to implement a lot of electric technology on a piece of mobile equipment like this," said Aposhian in a TurfNet podcast in January 2025.
"Traditional machines used hydraulics and traditional control mechanisms. My background as a mechanical engineer is in automation, so we implemented a lot of factory-type automation on a sod harvester. Since then we've become the largest producer of automated turf harvesters in the world."
Eventually, the company looked into expanding into mowing turf and not just harvesting it.
Mark LeBlanc and his design team at FireFly looked at what was in the turf market at the time, which were only early prototypes.
"Sod being an adjacent industry to golf, and knowing that a lot of our customers provide sod to golf courses, we always envisioned ourselves expanding into that market," LeBlanc said in the podcast interview. "After a couple years Steve gave me a team and a blank board and said, go design an automated fairway mower."
Click on the headlines below to read each story that makes up the rest of the top 10 most-read stories of 2025.
Retired superintendents share their tough times and how they overcame them
From St. Louis in the east to Kansas City in the west, Missouri is famous for its hot and oppressively humid summers. Conditions there can be so severe that Jon Miller, the late baseball announcer, once quipped during a Royals broadcast that visiting Missouri in summer was the world's most effective way to lose weight fast.
To that end, it did not take Joe Wachter long to recount the most challenging weather years during his long career as a golf course superintendent in the St. Louis area. Those memories are seared into his memory like a sun-baked green.
Ash borer research focuses on trees that are naturally resistant to the invasive pest
For more than two decades, the face of many golf courses across North America has changed thanks to an invasive pest no larger than a dime.
Since it was detected in southeastern Michigan in 2002 after arriving in Detroit in packing material aboard a cargo ship from China, the emerald ash borer has cut a swath of devastation across the continent, and has left a trail of millions of dead ash trees in its wake, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service.
Finally, help is on the way that might prevent a virtual wipeout of ash trees across North America by the emerald ash borer, and could result in repopulating forests and other areas, including affected golf courses, with naturally resistant trees.
The turf community lost a friend, advocate and ambassador in 2025 with the passing of Clemson professor emeritus Bruce Martin, Ph.D. Clemson photo Martin remembered for unyielding service to superintendents worldwide
Not everyone would climb aboard a plane, fly half way around the world just to work for a few hours then head back to the airport and return home without ever checking into a hotel.
Bruce Martin, Ph.D., not only would do that, he did do that.
A plant pathologist and extension service specialist at Clemson University for more than 30 years, Martin's expertise in diagnosing, preventing, treating and diagnosing turf diseases built a following among golf course superintendents in the Carolinas, throughout the country and around the world.
A native of Conway, Arkansas, Samuel Bruce Martin died Oct. 16. He was 71.
Colo stands as a symbol of what it means to face life's challenges head-on
Some people are equipped to handle adversity. Others are not.
Metaphorically speaking, longtime superintendent John Colo has taken a series of gut punches that would leave many unable to get off the mat. Even real-life challenges like job loss and wife Peggy's terminal battle with cancer were not enough to count out Colo, who has been director of golf course maintenance at Frenchman's Reserve in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida for the past five years.
The past decade has been an example of what it means to face adversity head-on and beat it. But that ability to bounce back from adversity began a long time ago, says Colo's twin brother Jim.
Historic Nicklaus project in St. Louis edges closer to completion
Normandie Golf Club has a history matched by few golf courses. Designed by Old Tom Morris protege Robert Foulis and opened in 1901, the course in St. Louis is one of the oldest tracks west of the Mississippi.
Through the years, many famous athletes and Hollywood personalities have walked the fairways at Normandie. But the historic St. Louis Club is casting aside its historic past for a place in the game's future.
Located in one of St. Louis' most underserved communities, the course is undergoing a rebirth thanks to Jack Nicklaus and members of the city's golf community.
Contractor electrocuted while working at Connecticut golf course
A tragedy that occurred at a Connecticut golf course serves as a sobering reminder about the importance of workplace safety.
According to published reports, a contractor working at Yale Golf Course was electrocuted Aug. 21 after he touched a downed power line at the golf course in New Haven. The line came down when a tree had fallen at the golf course during a recent storm. The worker, whose identity has not been released, was an employee of Eastern Land Management, a commercial landscape management company in Stamford, Connecticut.
It was unclear how the worker came into contact with the power line. Neither the Yale University Police nor the Hartford office of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration returned phone calls.
Study links threat of Parkinson's disease to golf course proximity
The scientific community has found another arrow in its quiver to fire at golf.
A recent study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association indicates a link between increased incidence of Parkinson’s disease and living near a golf course.
According to the study, people who live within three miles of a golf course showed a greater risk of contracting Parkinson’s disease than those outside that three-mile arc. Those living within a mile of a golf facility faced a 126 percent greater chance of getting the disease than those who lived at least six miles from a course.
Although the study indicates a possible link between golf course management practices and the likelihood of contracting Parkinson’s disease, it does not and cannot prove a direct cause and effect.
Kress unveiled the battery-powered KR800 40 "Cut N Go" robotic mower in 2025. Kress photo Kress unveils robotic mower with 40-inch cutting deck
A pioneer in autonomous mowing, Kress Commercial Robotics provided a sneak peak at its latest innovation in outdoor power equipment during the company's NEXT Summit.
Held April 3 in Colorado Springs, Colorado, the summit was the site of the unveiling of the company's new battery-powered KR800 40 "Cut N Go" robotic mower. The emission-free, electric, ZTR-replacement mower helps improve operational efficiency and profitability by mowing large areas in the background as crews focus on detailed and more time-consuming tasks. Cut N Go is designed to navigate with by mapping — a simple ride-on process — multiple areas.
With a 40-inch cutting deck, the battery-powered Cut N Go can mow as many as five acres on a single charge. The mower autonomously loads and unloads from a trailer, and can move on its own from one project to another after initial property mapping. It features a 5,000-hour operational life and fully integrates into the Kress Fleet Management System. With boundary-wirefree navigation and 360-degree obstacle avoidance Cut N Go avoids people and other objects.
Nicklaus Cos. files for bankruptcy after golfer wins $50 million judgment
In a year marked by litigation, the Nicklaus Companies filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection a month after a Florida jury awarded the golf legend a $50 million judgment in a defamation suit against the company.
Nicklaus filed suit against his former company, now controlled by New York banker Howard Milstein, earlier this year after it claimed he considered a $750 million offer to join the LIV Golf league, suffered from dementia and was unable to manage his affairs, according to published reports. Bloomberg News reported that, citing the Chapter 11 filing, Nicklaus Companies has estimated assets of $10 million to $50 million and liabilities of between $500 million and $1 billion.
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