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Castner Receives Award
Hyatt Hills teaching
professional Bill Castner was awarded the 2007 Junior Golf
Leadership award by the New Jersey PGA at their fall meeting
on October 22 at Crestmont Country Club in West Orange.
It is the second time in as many years that Castner has won
the prestigious award, which is awarded to New Jersey golf
professionals for outstanding contributions in the promotion
and development of junior golf and for reflecting the ideals
of those who work with youth.
Castner was also nominated
for the same award on a national level, and was one of the
final six candidates. The eventual winner was Dan
Harvenek of Larkspur, Colorado. Castner's work
included serving on the New Jersey PGA Junior Golf
Committee, running the junior golf program at Hyatt Hills,
serves as program director for the New Jersey Golf
Foundation, works with the First Tee of Essex County and is
involved with junior golf for Jersey City schools.
This was the third
consecutive year that a professional from Hyatt Hills has
won this prestigious award. in 2005 Head Golf
Professional Dan Hollis won the award.
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Up to Par - Lana's Receives
More Accolades from Star Ledger
Lana's, Clark
A miniature golf course,
driving range, nine-hole regulation course and upscale
restaurant on a former contaminated industrial tract? It
sounds so Jersey. But that is what happened at the Hyatt
Hills Complex, on the Clark-Cranford border. General Motors
paid for the $12 million cleanup of its former Hyatt-Clark
Roller Bearing plant, turning a wasteland into a golfer's
dream.
Lana's has received raves
for its eclectic, creative fare. Fresh-cut fettucine with
wild mushrooms and white truffle oil, and filet of beef with
French beans and black truffle potato puree? An upgrade from
burgers and fries, to be sure.
Lana's boasted the most
handsome dining room of our four picks. Recommended
appetizer: the Prince Edward Island mussels, steamed in
Brooklyn Lager; the beer, chorizo and mussels make for
interesting bedfellows. The oysters were not in the same
class as their counterparts at the Bamboo Grille. The
antipasto featured a superior selection of Parma ham, caper
berries, marinated artichoke hearts, marinated white
anchovies and imported olives.
Standout entrees: the veal
chops, enlivened with melted leeks, pancetta (Italian bacon)
and orange essence; roasted rack of lamb, meltingly soft,
accompanied by an artichoke, olive and sweet red pepper
salad; and the seared halibut with sautéed spinach, currants
and chorizo, even if the saffron cream gave it a slightly
off-putting flavor. Farrell, a duck doyen if there ever was
one, called the pan-roasted duck breast "okay." The diver
scallops, with an Israeli couscous, capers and an almond
curry brown butter, were too chewy.
Top desserts: the warm
Granny Smith apple tart, and the mango sorbet, teasingly
tropical and a great way to end our day on the links. Snack
bar food? Not any more.
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Hyatt's Pond Water to be Tested for
Certification Purposes
6/3/05
United Water /Rahway works under the
direction of E J Flynn has taken and will analyze the water within
the pond at Hyatt Hills Complex. This cooperative support will
further help maintain the best water quality on the property. The
test results will be shared with Audubon International. Hyatt Hills
is currently going through the process of being certified as an
Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary Program (ACSP). Achievement in the
area of Water Management is one of the six steps in the process of
being certified.
Audubon
International has been the leading environmental organization to
provide comprehensive environmental education and conservation
assistance to golf course superintendents and industry
professionals. Through collaborative efforts begun in 1991 with the
United States Golf Association (USGA), membership in the Audubon
Cooperative Sanctuary Program for Golf Courses has steadily grown to
include more than 2,300 courses in all fifty states, Canada, and
increasingly, around the world.
The ACSP for Golf
Courses seeks to address golf’s environmental concerns while
maximizing golf course opportunities to provide open space
benefits. This highly-regarded education and assistance program
promotes participation in comprehensive environmental management,
enhancement and protection of existing wildlife habitats, and
recognition for those who are engaged in environmentally-responsible
projects.
The following golf courses in New Jersey are certified:
Ballyowen Golf
Course, Sparta, Baltusrol Golf Club, Springfield, Blue Heron Pines
Golf Club, Cologne, Brick Township Municipal Utilities Authority,
Brick, Brigantine Golf Links, Brigantine, Brooklake Country Club, Florham Park;
Echo Lake Country Club, Westfield; Edgewood Country Club, Riverdale;
Fiddler's Elbow Country Club, Far Hills; Harbor Pines Golf Club, Egg
Harbor Township; Hidden Creek Golf Club, Egg Harbor Township; Laurel
Creek Country Club, Mt. Laurel;
Metedeconk National Golf Club, Jackson; Newton Country Club, Newton
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| Hyatt Hills Starts Another
Certification Component of Audubon International
5/5/05
Hyatt Hills starts another certification
component of Audubon International. Wildlife and Habitat Management
is the current component that is being sought. The purpose of this
component is to enhance natural areas and landscaping on the golf
course to protect and improve native habitats and the wildlife that
depend on them for survival.
One of the goals of this certification
is to keep a written inventory of at least bird and mammal species
and track wildlife use of the property. Additional inventories may
include amphibians, reptiles, fish, and other wildlife, and plants,
such as trees, shrubs, and herbaceous species which are non-woody
plants. To do that Hyatt Hills needs volunteers to note
observations of birds and other wildlife at the Golf Complex.
Volunteers with or without experience are needed for short intervals
during mornings, afternoons, and evenings. Please call the Pro Shop
at 732-669-9100 to sign up.
Once we get
sufficient volunteers we will have an orientation meeting to discuss
the assignments and the how to for documentation of the sightings.
The Commission
wants to be a fully certified facility. Certification would show
both communities of Clark and Cranford the Commission’s desire to be
sensitive to our environment, which means proper care to the land it
maintains and the habitat within.
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Hyatt Hills Seeks to Become Audubon Certified
4/12/05
The Hyatt Hills
Commissioners have recently approved to take the necessary steps to
get Audubon Certified. This effort will be under the direction of
Commissioner DiGiano and Superintendent Joseph Flaherty.
The Audubon Society’s mission statement is to
conserve and restore natural ecosystems, focusing on birds, other
wildlife, and their habitats for the benefit of humanity and the
earth's biological diversity.
What does this
mean to the communities of Cranford and Clark? It shows the
continued willingness of the Commission to be sensitive to the
environment and the habitat within. The Communities have taken a
“Brown Field” and turned it into a recreational facility that is
perhaps one the finest golf complexes in the state. A “Brown Field”
is one in which the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) terms as
an area with a need to be cleaned up. With their guidance an
approved program was undertaken and thus enabling the communities of
Cranford and Clark to redevelop property that had lain dormant and
contaminated. The efforts of many leaders of both communities have
now remediated and improved that environment to establish a
productive and attractive open space, which will be an asset for
years to come. The land is now beneficial for our businesses, our
neighbors, and our citizens at large.
The process of
now getting Audubon certified furthers shows the commitment of the
present Commissioners to continue being focus on the proper care to
the land and its habitat.
The process is such that it could take up to three
years to satisfy the requirements for certification. Last fall one
of the projects, with the help of a local garden club, was completed
with native or indigenous plantings of various perennials at each
hole. Community evolvement is now helping again in our quest for
certification by building nesting boxes for small birds such as
Eastern Bluebirds, Tree Swallows, House Wrens, Black-capped
Chickadees, and House Sparrows. The Union County Vocational and
Technical school under the guiding eyes of wood shop teachers Mr.
Skip Knittel, instructor of the Carpentry & Construction Classes,
who have volunteered along with their classes to build the boxes
according to the specs submitted by the Audubon Society. The
nesting boxes that they make will make hopefully attract these
wanted birds.
A larger and multi-layered nesting box for Purple
Martins will be purchased from a local Clark resident who builds and
sells to local residents. These types of birds are known to feed on
mosquitoes and other insects.
Currently we have a Red Tailed Hark nesting on our
property and an Osprey who has swooped down and clutched a few fish
out of our pond with some regularity.
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Hyatt Hills Golf Complex
♦ 1300 Raritan Road
♦
Clark
♦
NJ ♦
07066
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732-669-9100 |
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