loksand features in golfdom march issue
It’s your job to troubleshoot problems on your golf course. It’s our job to keep you informed of some of the most innovative, cutting-edge solutions for your golf course. Only in this month’s Golfdom will you find solutions for you to consider for bunker challenges, pathway problems and erosion failures. If you’re just learning about any of these golf maintenance problem-solvers, remember us when you utilize them at your course.
To demonstrate to attendees at the 2025 GCSAA Conference and Trade Show in San Diego what Loksand is capable of, the company invited attendees to kneel down, grab a handful of bunker sand and pick it up. Most of it would immediately fall out of their hand; the only sand that stayed was what was firmly in grasp.
Then, they’d ask attendees to grab a handful of sand treated with Loksand — a crimped fiber that can be added to any sand or soil. Much more sand stays in one’s hand, like pulling a core from a green and seeing the dirt and sand attached to the roots.
“It’s a little bit of a black magic product, to be quite frank,” says Danny Potter, founder, owner and director of Centaur Asia Pacific, which represents products for golf, sports turf, nursery and lawn worldwide. “You don’t get compaction. You get drainage … you get firmness.”
The product is 15 years old but has been sitting on the shelf until recently. Previously, it was used for soccer fields in the United Kingdom or on roads for overflow dirt parking lots. Now, the folks behind Loksand are eager to show superintendents how it can help alleviate trouble areas on golf courses.
The golf-Loksand connection began when Australia’s Graham Marsh, a former touring pro with a host of wins worldwide, was designing the New Course at Singapore Island CC in 2019. He asked Potter if he had a solution to keep the tops of bunkers from collapsing after heavy rains during the wet season.
“To be fair, you would need a crew of 10 running around with fly mowers to maintain these bunkers,” Potter says. “They have these big, gnarly noses. I knew (about Loksand) and just thought outside the box.”
Potter showed what LokSand could do by building a steep bunker with it and one without. Marsh walked along the top of the bunker without Loksand, and the top caved in. Then he walked along the top of the bunker constructed with Loksand.
“He’s like, ‘What the (heck) is going on here? What have you done?’” Potter laughs. “He jumped up and down on it, and it didn’t move. It worked. Then he went and ordered two tons of the product and did all 27 holes of bunkers with it.”
To be clear, LokSand is not meant to be hit from — a golfer would break their club, or worse, their wrist. It is meant to be a stabilizing material for areas that typically crumble based on gravity, wash out or struggle with perennial wetness.
“The things you could do with it are amazing,” says Wayne Branthwaite, a former superintendent who has been the longtime vice president of Nick Price Golf Course Design. “It’s not just a bunker edge product. It’s a cart path product. It’s a solution for hardscapes. It doesn’t compact. You don’t get all that dust like you do with coquina or concrete.”
Potter says LokSand was recently used to build a playground in Melbourne, Australia, to solve the constant wear areas around the slides and swings. It was also used on a driving range near Brisbane Airport, built on a floodplain. When the tide comes up, it gets wet. The wet areas were replaced with rectangles of Loksand so grass could grow.
“It’s like a ready-made root system. When the grass grows into it, because of those pore spaces, the roots can grow quickly through this and intertwine through the fibers,” he says. “It’s not just binding the soils together. It’s giving the roots structure.”
One American course utilizing Loksand is Miakka GC near Myakka City, Fla. A Fry/Straka Global Golf Course Design project in conjunction with Paul Azinger, construction of the course is ongoing. The bunkers emulate Australian bunkering using Loksand for the vertical face. If a shot hits into the vertical face of the bunker, the ball falls rather than ricochets.
“It’s a new method, to say the least,” says Terry Kennelly, director of agronomy at Miakka with 40 years of industry experience at courses such as Inverness, Congressional, Concession and The Pelican on his résumé. “We’ve all seen that Australian look, but they’ve got the sand structure there that enables them do that. We don’t have that in America. That, and we’ve had almost 90 inches of rain here. They don’t get 90 inches in Australia.”

“It’s great to get a big project like Miakka,” Potter says. “(But) that’s only going to be one to five percent of the projects that we are going to do. The rest are going to be grass-covered steep faces, even straight faces. I see it helping the average Joe, the average golf course that comes back every year and keeps trying to find ways to grow grass on their bunkers and stabilizing those edges.”
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