This section is Presented

This section was produced by the editorial department. The client was not given the opportunity to put restrictions on the content or review it prior to publication.

by Callaway Golf

Breadcrumb Trail Links

SportsGolf

Each backyard project looks like a real golf course, not just an outdoor putting mat. Prices range from $20,000 to the client’s imagination.

Get the latest from Jon McCarthy straight to your inbox Sign Up

Published Mar 31, 2026  •  Last updated 25 minutes ago  •  6 minute read

You can save this article by registering for free here. Or sign-in if you have an account.

A backyard green is every golfer's dream.A backyard green is every golfer’s dream.Article content

The following is an excerpt from Postmedia’s Monday Morning Golf presented by Callaway. Have it delivered directly to your inbox once a week by clicking here. And enter for your chance to win a Callaway Quantum driver right here.

Advertisement 2

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY

Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada.

Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account.Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on.Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists.Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists.Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword.

SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES

Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada.

Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account.Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on.Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists.Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists.Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword.

REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES

Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience.

Access articles from across Canada with one account.Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments.Enjoy additional articles per month.Get email updates from your favourite authors.

THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK.

Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience.

Access articles from across Canada with one accountShare your thoughts and join the conversation in the commentsEnjoy additional articles per monthGet email updates from your favourite authors

Article content

The snow had finally melted enough to provide a sliver of green in a sea of white, so I immediately grabbed the putter waiting at the back door and ran out to roll some putts.

Article content

Article content

Let’s back this story up a bit.

It all started late last summer when my wife told me that I should see the kitchen in the house for sale just three doors down from ours. I knew the house in question, not for the beautiful island and the fancy backsplash, but for the putting green in the backyard. We do not live in a neighbourhood where you’d expect to see a golf green, so it kind of stood out.

“Yes,” I said, maintaining a calm, cool and collected measure to my voice. “We. Should. Go. Look. At. That. Kitchen.”

Six months of cleaning, purging, stressing and buying and selling in a wild real estate market later, we are the proud owners of a backyard putting green with four holes and two small bunkers.

Advertisement 3

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

And, yes, a new kitchen.

After moving on a minus-30C day in early February, the wait for spring has been rather painful. But that has been the story for every golfer as this particularly brutal winter refuses to go gently.

I’m no groundhog, but hopefully it’s safe to say we’ve made it and it won’t be long before we are fighting for tee times and negotiating handicaps on the first tee.

Our Jon McCarthy lines up a putt while waiting for the snow to melt in his new dream backyard. Our Jon McCarthy lines up a putt while waiting for the snow to melt in his new dream backyard.

With the entire backyard putting green now revealed, I mentioned to my wife that I should look into what spring maintenance needs to go into this beautiful new toy. She directed me to a box full of papers that the previous homeowners had left behind that might offer a clue as to the name and phone number of the installers.

It was good advice, except unnecessary because years ago when the green was being built I just happened to jot down the name and number of the company off the side of their truck. You know, for research.

Monday Morning Golf Banner

Monday Morning Golf

Thanks for signing up!

Article content

Advertisement 4

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

My phone call to Greenside Turf was answered enthusiastically by the owner Jeremy Stunt, who instantly remembered every detail, and apparently knows my new backyard better than me.

“You’re one of my few with a sod-stacked bunker,” he said. “We needed to figure out the elevation. From a build standpoint, I’m like, ‘What am I gonna do? You can’t just build a retaining wall on a putting green.’ So the answer was a bunker wall.”

The sod-walled turf bunker is a unique element in a backyard green. The sod-walled turf bunker is a unique element in a backyard green.

Stunt’s voice and energy instantly reminded me of numerous conversations with passionate characters in the golf industry. Never at a loss for words and with one story spilling instantly into the next, he would fit right in on a bar stool at the 19th hole of any golf club.

“It’s a toy that you don’t need, but yeah, you want one,” he said of his greens. “It’s for a niche market, but if you build them right, they will last.”

Advertisement 5

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

Fun for the whole family

His company Greenside Turf does a wide assortment of projects big and small, most frequently installing turf yards for people looking to permanently park their lawnmower. But it’s clear that creating golf greens is his favourite.

“Most of the clients I have are parents, so it’s for them and their kids. That’s kind of the big one. Then you have the hardcore golfer, you know, that wants to practice,” he said. “Then there’s the guy that just wants to look out in his backyard and look cool. One interesting client is the father that gets to babysit at the same time. So we say, ‘OK, let’s put in a bunker, but let’s put in beach sand.’ He gets the best of both worlds, his baby can play sand castles, he’s got this green, and even his wife’s happy.”

Advertisement 6

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

A backyard green is every golfer's dream. A backyard green is every golfer’s dream.

Stunt’s journey to this unique profession is quite interesting.

His grandfather Rudy Pilous was head coach of the Chicago Blackhawks and won a Stanley Cup in 1961, bringing the family from Canada to the United States.

As a teenager, Stunt traded hockey for golf when his family moved to a Wellington, Fla., golf community that was home to Fred Couples and a number of other PGA Tour pros. He got into landscaping there and eventually began building golf courses, including working for legendary course designer Tom Fazio.

When the housing market crashed in 2008, Stunt came home to Canada where he began making backyard paradises for golf nuts.

His extensive background building courses means there is no project too big for him to tackle. While we’re speaking on the phone, he sends me photos of all sorts of projects, including a 30,000 square-foot green complex cut through trees and allowing for full shots over a pond from a tee box that he built near the customer’s back door.

Advertisement 7

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

The finished product at one of the biggest projects golf green designer Jeremy Stunt has created. The finished product at one of the biggest projects golf green designer Jeremy Stunt has created.

“He said, ‘I’m tired of fishing out balls from the woods.’ He would hire a kid to go pick up the balls he hit from his yard with a canoe in his pond.” Stunt said.

So they built a golf hole instead.

What kind of turf to use?

“There’s different turf you can use. There’s cross-stitch turf where there’s no uniform direction to the material. Our turf is a nylon, propylene, polyurethane turf. We have a long ball turf, that can receive a shot from 150 yards. Then there’s a mid-range turf that’ll receive a shot from 60 yards out. And then there’s your putting surface that can also receive close chips from like 30 yards.”

One client asked Greenside Turf owner Jeremy Stunt to build him an entire golf hole. One client asked Greenside Turf owner Jeremy Stunt to build him an entire golf hole.

Stunt says his history building golf courses has shaped the way he tackles his backyard work, making sure that each project looks like a real golf course, not just an outdoor putting mat. He always tries to include a bunker and his project prices begin in the $20,000 range and can go up to whatever the client has in his imagination.

Advertisement 8

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

“Here in Canada, there is nobody that builds them like I do,” Stunt said. “Some people just roll out some turf and run. They don’t give the creative touch to make it look like a real green. I give it some contour, and breaks, and tiers, you know, make it look like a green, so when people walk out to a backyard, they say, ‘Wow, that’s so cool.’”

The green speeds usually start at around ten on the stimpmeter out of the box and slow down to nine-and-a-half once Stunt adds sand or the newer ceramic bearing infill between the blades of turf. That sand adds enough weight to hold the turf to the ground firmly and it also acts to keep the fibers spread so the ball rolls true over the tips of the turf grass.

“The more you play on it, the faster your green gets,” he said. “After three years, if you play on it a lot, and with the weight of snow, it’ll start speeding up to ten-and-a-half. After five years, you’ll be at 11 and you’ll call me and say, ‘Jeremy, I’m putting on USGA greens here. I need you to slow them down.’ So I come with a whacker packer, a plate compactor. And it vibrates all the sand back up to the top. Then I hand broom all that back in, and now you’re back down to a ten.”

Advertisement 9

This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

Winter requires adjustments

Canadian winters require some adjustments to the process compared to building greens in warmer climates where the ground isn’t moving due to upheaval from frost.

A backyard green is every golfer's dream. A backyard green is every golfer’s dream.

“I think just building them right, you know, with a proper foundation to make them last,” Stunt said of the difference. “It needs some love.”

By the end of our conversation I was glancing both out the window and over at my putter. The same putter I’ve recently been told needs to find a home somewhere other than the new kitchen.

Golfers are known to be a day-dreaming group, but I’ll admit moving into a house with a putting green was never on my bingo card. I love almost everything about golf. I love the challenge. I love the camaraderie. I love being outside. I love the sound of a crisp iron. I love smashing drives on the range. I even like playing golf alone in the rain.

It dawned on me that there is only one thing I’ve never much enjoyed.

Putting practice.

Read More

Golfer Tiger Woods stands by his overturned vehicle in Jupiter Island, Fla..

Vanessa Trump reportedly gives Tiger Woods ultimatum after DUI arrest: ‘Get your s*** together’

Tiger Woods reportedly was involved in a rollover car crash in Jupiter, Fla., on Friday.

Tiger Woods charged with DUI after rollover crash: ‘He crawled out of the passenger’s door’

Article content

Share this article in your social network

Write A Comment