Greens Update June 2011
At
the request of Eddie Donlon, an agronomist Eddie Connaughton was asked to come
to Rush Golf Club and inspect the greens and general course. There had been
some problem areas on some greens which were not responding to various conventional
treatments and Eddie Donlon wanted to get a second opinion.
Eddie
Connaughton has completed his report and it is available to all members on
either soft copy or hard copy. Please contact the office staff to request a
copy.
The
main points of the Eddie Connaughton's report were as follows;
Eddie
Connaughton was asked the question, how do we get fine fescue grasses in to our
greens. He responded that we have meadow grass greens and it is the dominant
species and this despite all the overseeding with fescue grasses. In Eddie
Connaughton’s opinion, we should not attempt to get fescues in to our meadow
grass greens and he gave a variety of reasons for this. He believes that the
best way to get Fescue dominated grasses in to our greens is reconstruction and
the cost of this may be prohibitive approx €30,000k per green ! He recommends
using bent grass seed only rather than the current mixture of fescue & bent
grasses.
Greens
Committee 17th
June 2011
Greens Verti-Cut/Hyrdo
Jet/Fertiliser Programme.
See
Greens Update Notice issued 17th June
Please note the dates Hydrojetting is being done, at least one green will be out
of play at any one time. It will take approx 10hours to complete all greens.
Verti-Cutting, all
greens will be sanded at same time so there will be disruption to golf.
|
Monday 4th
Jul |
Wetting Agent |
|
Monday 11th
Jul |
Hyrdojet |
|
Monday 18th
Jul |
DoubleVerti-Cutting Granular
Fertiliser |
|
Monday 25th
Jul |
Hyrdojet |
|
Tuesday
26th July |
Wetting Agent |
|
Tuesday 2
Aug |
Double Verti-Cutting |
|
Monday 8th
Aug |
Liquid
Fertiliser |
|
Monday 15th
Aug |
Double Verti-Cutting |
|
Tuesday
16th Aug |
Wetting
Agent |
|
Monday 22nd
Aug |
Hyrdojet |
|
Monday 29th
Aug |
Liquid
Fertiliser |
|
Monday 5th
Sept |
Double Verti-Cutting |
|
Tuesday 6th
Sept |
Wetting
Agent |
|
Monday 12th
Sept |
Pole-Forking |
|
Monday 19th
Sept |
Liquid
Fertiliser |
|
Monday 10th
Oct |
Liquid
Fertiliser |
Date: 28th June 2011.
RUSH
GOLF CLUB
REPORT
AND RECOMMENDATIONS
SITE
VISIT: 7 June 2011
PRESENT:
Mr. Podge Dolan, President
Mr.
Ivan Kelly, Greens Convenor
Mr.
Eddie Donlon, Links Superintendent
Mr.
Eddie Connaughton, Agronomist.
INTRODUCTION:
I
carried out a links inspection on the above date with those mentioned in
attendance and we concentrated our time on the greens as they were causing the
most concern regarding condition and ball roll.
The links was looking very good despite the continuous poor weather for
the time of year. There was a droughty
look to the fairways where irrigation was not as evident on all the high drier
areas giving the brown appearance to the grass which contrasts very well with
the greener hollows. The wispy rough
also looks very well and this should be encouraged further by annual cutting of
the fescue dominated rough to encourage that wispy thin appearance.
GREENS:
The
greens were causing the most concern due to some die-back on greens like the
1st, 2nd, 3rd & 5th and isolated areas on other greens. I was examining the greens as they were
recovering from the die-back of grass some 3-5 weeks ago. On the first green in particular the affected
areas were almost in two distinct lines up the green thus suggesting some spray
damage. I examined these areas and took
soil cores out for a physical determination.
There was no dry patch present on the 1st but it was observed on
the 4th green which showed slightly different symptoms to that of the other
greens. The 4th green had the classic
links look of dry patch which is a random pattern of different coloured grasses
over all the green rather than particular areas showing stress and
die-back.
The
cores from the 2nd, 3rd, 5th & 8th all exhibited the same condition which
was not relating to dry patch but more strikingly showed a very poor level of
root activity. In fact the root depth
was only in the top ˝ - 1 inch of the green surface which is very shallow and
leaves little room for the greens to
endure stresses such as dry weather, poor growth or low cutting heights. The root depth will have to be improved in
the long term to create a more stable environment for producing good greens
throughout the year. The current
practice of hollow coring in the autumn with micro-solid tining
during the winter and deeper verti-draining every 2/3
seasons is a
reasonable approach but it will not improve greatly the root depth in the
greens.
It
will be necessary to commence summer aeration to improve root activity and this
can be achieved with Hydro- Jet Aeration. This is a method of injecting water under
high pressure into the greens profiles causing a fracturing of the compacted
soil and allowing roots penetrate through the resulting holes. It can be carried out during the summer
months without disruption to the playing surfaces which satisfies golfer’s
demands for smooth putting surfaces. It
also allows aeration on the greens when the grass is growing actively and roots
have an opportunity to grow to a better standard. This aeration should be carried out three
times this year with four treatments scheduled for the 2012 season.
With
the damaged areas on the greens not caused by Dry Patch and having an
appearance of being sprayer related, we examined all the treatments carried out
on the greens this spring. The one
chemical used that was not previously used was a seedhead
suppressant for the meadowgrass. This product is capable of causing die-back
to the grass if overlap takes place or if stressful conditions are evident on
the grass at the time of use (i.e. dry cold winds in April). I
would be very confident that the die-back on the greens was related to chemical
stress as sections of grass beside poor grass were perfectly healthy. Also having reviewed the work programmes
carried out it is the only treatment that could have caused the type of
die-back that occurred as no other stresses such as disease or insect damage
appears in patterns. These areas will recover over the summer months and
have all been overseeded
over the last few weeks. I recommended a
small amount of plugging with the hole cutter from the
edge of the green to regain some good cupping locations on greens like the 1st
in the back left part of the green.
The
dominant grass species on these greens is annual meadowgrass
(Poa annua) with
little sign of any Fescue despite all the overseeding
that has taken place over the years with this species. Meadowgrass is the
dominant grass type of greens in
·
Traffic
patterns and wear and tear problems with a nine hole
course favours meadowgrass over fescue.
·
Summer
management of low cutting heights would not promote the fescues.
·
The profile
of the greens make-up is old sand and organic matter that is conducive to
moisture retention which favours meadowgrass.
·
The
disruption process of reducing the meadowgrass would
have serious impact on the smoothness of the surfaces produced over a minimum
of five years.
If
the club wanted to have Fescue dominated greens the best way to achieve
this would be through reconstruction and re-grassing of the greens.
I
believe it is possible to manage these greens to produce desirable putting
surfaces that exhibit links condition of a true medium- fast character. As demonstrated on the 5th green during my
visit, topdressing lightly to reduce leaf surface and verti-cutting
to thin out the grass sward will produce good surface quality. The nutrition (fertilising) programmes have
to be adjusted to produce slow, even growth rather
than “bursts” of growth from the granular applications. Also, the use of plant growth regulators
during the summer months will help with producing finer meadowgrass
that will putt true and smooth without too much “flushing” which invariably
causes greens to be slow.
The
following should form the basis of the greens management programme for the
remainder of this season:
Aeration:
·
Hydro-jet
three times between now and September
·
Schedule
Autumn hollow coring as normal
·
Schedule
Winter micro-solid tining monthly
Nutrition:
·
The main
recommendation is to use liquids during the summer with Primo-Maxx (PGR) to maintain a slow even growth without excessive
flushing of the grass. Therefore
commence the following liquid mix week beginning June 20 per 500 m2 and repeat
on a 3 week cycle depending on growth and grass clippings yield.
1 litre of Best
24-0-0
1 litre of Best
Silica 30 % +15% Potassium
1 litre of Algae
Green seaweed liquid + 8% N
20 ml Primo- Maxx
·
As these
green are prone to Anthracnose disease the granular Scotts
14-5-10 should be applied before the end of July at 25 gr
/m2. Time this granular when the second
liquid feed is running out and then commence the liquid feed again in
mid-August when the effects of the granular feed is wearing off.
(Note: as fertilising is very mobile and depending on weather
conditions, Eddie should keep me updated monthly by phone and we can review our
programme)
Cutting/ Verti- Cutting / Topdressing/
Rolling:
·
The height
of cut was to be adjusted down to 3.5 mm after my visit and it should be
retained as that for the summer season unless drought or other stress
conditions deem it necessary to raise back to 4 mm.
·
Verti-cutting and light sand topdressing
will have a major impact on the surface roll of these greens as it should be
scheduled for twice per month with a double row of the verti-cut
set at 1 mm below the cutting height.
This depth can be adjusted to suit weather and growth (i.e. damp weather
with lush growth use the deeper depth, while dry weather with less growth raise
the blade) throughout the summer. Topdress with a minimum of 1 kilo per m2 after verti-cutting to achieve similar conditions to those
demonstrated on site when I visited.
Rolling after topdressing is also very beneficial to bed in the sand and
smooth the surface for play.
·
Rolling
should be carried out for all member competitions if labour resources allow as
it makes up for not having to “shave” the greens down to achieve speed. With the shallow rooting in the greens low
cutting heights cannot be sustained during periods of dry weather and therefore
rolling will improve ball roll on the greens.
Spraying:
·
A wetting
agent should be applied monthly throughout the summer with the higher/drier
areas treated daily if necessary with the wetting agent gun and tablets.
·
Always have
a stock of fungicide to spray whenever an outbreak occurs. However, with these greens a preventative
monthly programme should be in place from September through to December as a
precaution against
Fusarium attacks. Also,
with September hollow coring spray with a preventative contact to reduce the
risk of disease with heavy sand applications.
Overseeding:
·
I do not
see any sign of Fescues appearing in these greens from the overseeding
carried out and with the management programmes in place Bentgrass
would have a better opportunity to establish.
Therefore, change to using Agrostis Capillaris (Browntop Bent) for
the September overseeding.
GENERAL:
I
commented earlier about promoting the wispy rough and cutting the Fescue areas
(i.e. high dry parts) will further promote this. However, there are parts of the links like
the left side short of the 3rd green that is full of pasture grasses. This would be an ideal place to experiment
with the Rescue herbicide in September for control of the coarser
ryegrasses. This herbicide works very
well at removing ryegrass
from Fescue after 3-4 treatments
and is much more effective than the cutting down method in such areas as left
of the 3rd.
In
conclusion, Eddie Donlon should keep in touch with me
on how the programme is working and a review visit should be scheduled for the
autumn if possible.
Eddie
B. Connaughton, B.Sc.
Agronomist.