The following is a reprint of my April newsletter and following that I will be posting pictures of the regrassing of holes 5 and 6.
Notes from the Fairways
Well spring
has sprung. In this newsletter I am
going to explain what is going on holes 5 and 6.
Our greens
are made up of a mixture of creeping bentgrass and Poa annua. It is estimated that 65% of the golf greens
in the United States are a mixture of bent/poa.
So you may ask why is it so bad? Poa’s survival mechanism is
reproduction so it dumps all of its energy into making seeds. Poa is a very weak plant and is susceptible to
heat stress, cold stress and many diseases.
Poa is a very aggressive weed. One plant can produce 360 seeds in a growing
season, and can go from germination to seeding in 45 days. With this said, in the past we would never
have tried to produce a pure bentgrass stand of grass, but in the last 5 years
some very aggressive new cultivars of bentgrass have come on the market along
with many new chemicals aimed at controlling Poa. Our plan of attack is to strip all the sod
off including the collar and approach. (The
reason for removing collar and approach is to keep poa as far away from our new
greens as possible). Next we will fumigate the soil to kill off some of the
seeds in the seedbank. The sod grower
will come and lay large rolls of pure bentgrass on the green surface and
Bluegrass for the approach and collars.
After about 5 days we will get a one ton roller and roll the greens and
then probably mow the next day. With
decent weather we will be on the greens in 4 weeks. Now it will take some time to get them up to
our normal speeds as we have to slowly lower the Height of cut as to not shock
them or scalp them. For up to date
information and pictures of this project checkout my blog at avondalegolfcourse@blogspot.com
See you on
the course.
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Picture of 6 green showing the survival of the overseeded bent grasss compared to the sodded Poa from 2012. The Poa is the very dead looking grass on the left.
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Preparing to cut out the old sod. We went as deep at the sod cutter would go to remove as much organic material as possible |
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The next step was to cut it into pieces and lift it out and haul it off. The pieces were very heavy since we had cut them so thick. We did very well and in 1 1/2 days we had removed all the greens sod. |
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Next we triple rototilled the greens surface to blend in any leftover organic material |
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Wheel packing the surface before smoothing and floating it out. |
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removing the approach sod, the reason we are doing this is because the same mower that mows the approach mows the collar and we want to keep the Poa as far away from are new bent as possible. Note the wet spot an the left next to the grass, that is a natural spring. |
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The above 2 pictures shows us digging to install drainage to firm up 6 approach. This natural spring filled up the ditch we dug by the next morning. We installed drain tile and pea to capture this spring which should help firm up this approach. |
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We used the approach sod to build a new blue tee on hole 9. |
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Final grading |
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Ready for sod |
On April 7th at about 10:30 am we will start laying the sod and will be completed Tuesday the 8th. With decent weather we should be able to start playing on them around May 15th. If interested the USGA published an article talking about the trend of re-grassing with pure bent, here is the link:
http://gsr.lib.msu.edu/article/skorulski-cool-11-16-12.pdf