And now for something completely different. If I had my way I would love to aerate the greens just after the August long weekend since recovery would be quick and by the time the turf began to grow new roots we would be very close to raising the HOC which would mean even more opportunity to grow roots (generally, the more roots the better turf can handle stress). The reason I bring this up relates to the condition of the fairways this year during the long heat spell we experienced. I have spent most of the summer amazed and confused at how well the fairways have looked. When you do the same thing from year to year you expect similar results so when you get those years where things are different from normal (good or bad) you sorta want to know why... at least I do!
I don't compare conditions between courses since there are so many different variables but I do ask in general what other golf courses are experiencing turf growth/health wise. If it's similar to what is happening at KGC I credit/blame the weather. If conditions are different than what KGC is experiencing I look at what I am doing different and try to come up with answers as to why things differ. To be honest, growing turf is as much an art as it is a science so many of my conclusion are complete guesses. So this year my guess as to why we had good fairways is three fold. (Oops! After re-reading that last paragraph I seem to be implying that KGC fwys are better than other golf course.....not what I mean. What I meant was the fwys at KGC are better this year than they have been other years; no arguing that point!)
- We are mowing fairways way less than in the past. Perhaps less traffic and less mechanical stress associated with cutting the fairway is allowing the turf to direct its energies into increasing stand density versus expending energy to repair damaged tissues and recuperate from mowing stress.
- The last couple years, due to staffing, we aerated our fairways very early compared to waiting until late fall. I suspect by aerating early the turf has had time to recover and establish new roots which allow it to better handle stress.
- Our continued effort in late spring/early summer to aerate, over-seed and top dress areas I know are prone to showing heat/moisture stress during the growing season.
River Watch
We've been able to keep one pump running by putting in about 10 to 12 man hours moving rocks. In preparation for the vacuum truck next week I had a back hoe come down and clean out directly in front of our intake. Obviously, the rain at the end of the week brought up the river and allowed me to shut off the irrigation and catch up on filling the reservoir so we are sitting pretty good for the next little bit. There is possibly some things in the works to help us with our water woes at the river but I'll keep it vague until I can give you more information.