Posts

Showing posts from May, 2025

Let's end our 8th month in a row of non-existent bermudagrass weather

Image
  We do not need any more rain, that is for sure. Temperatures in the low 50's (it was 49 Sunday morning) have absolutely halted any kind of bermuda growth. Clouds and rain are preventing any progress as well. We may go as far as to say we were greener a month ago than we are today! June temps do not look like they are bringing anything in the 90's at all. The long range forecast says July 7th is the first 90 degree day between now and then!  Any energy the bermuda is actually churning through is being put towards seed heads right now anyway. This is truly a year where this turf isn't going to get moving until July 4th. Hopefully the summer will stretch long and we can fit a few good growing months in. At least the greens are happy but even they could use some more sunlight. On Tuesday we applied some soil nutrients along with wetting agent to help keep moving the rain down.  We also dusted the greens with sand for the first time since aeration. Most of this was washed in...

More rain but a busy week for Turfgrass

Image
  Our main priority this week after Senior Member Member was to poke solid tine holes in all the bermuda short grass on both courses. This is only a once a year event, mainly because of time. These extra holes will help water infiltrate a little faster and promote new root growth with the bermuda. In addition to the tractor aerator we had 5 walk behind machines helping do tees and approaches as well as larger fairway areas. The guys persisted through the rain on Wednesday to get all 85 acres of short grass punched.  Next up was getting our summer pre-emergent herbicide application down on not just the short grass but the entire property, about 200 acres. We start with two different herbicides close to the green and then work our way out wall to wall from there. This application was watered in nicely with the rain and should protect us for 3-4 months against crab and goosegrass. The compost is out across most of the rough on both courses as well. The rain has knocked down the s...

3" of rain keeping us saturated

Image
  Three inches of rain came down pretty much the entire day on Tuesday. This oak was already leaning slightly on 5 Manakin but the rain softened up the soil enough so the heavy oak leaves and branches pulled it all the way down. The rain is great for the bermuda, especially the new sod, but it delayed us getting some more sod out on the remaining winter kill areas. Sodding will get back on track early next week. Also next week we will be implementing our annual solid tine aeration for the tees, fairways and approaches. This is really a non-invasive practice but it helps us loosen the soil up a bit for some healthier root growth. We will also being putting out compost in the rough next week so be prepared for the healthy scent! We are fortunate to have the right tools to clean up a big tree like this. Doing tree work in house does wonders for the budget and having this mess cleaned up before golf play is often an overlooked benefit. The BENTGRASS is just now breaking dormancy on the...

The rain has some bermuda moving

Image
  17,000 square feet of bermuda went down again this week, getting us much closer to patching up all the winter damage. The sod is fertilized and watered immediately. The turf from last week is rooting in and will start to be mowed early next week. The rains are helping us and it is nice to see some more regular dew forming in the mornings as opposed to the dry air the last two weeks. Next week we will tackle 13 Manakin and then evaluate what is left to sod.  The local reports have rolled through and we are certainly not alone in seeing damage from winter temperatures, snow and shade. Above is an excerpt from our regional consultant who also called the damage from that winter a 1 in 10 year event. This means that replacing bermuda in the shade that didn't survive with bermuda again isn't necessarily a bad idea, especially with continued tree and drainage work. Only having to replace 1 acre out of 200 across both courses really is a decent turn out. The other 199 acres of turf ...

Perfect weather for bentgrass, bermuda needs some rain

Image
  We have had a handful of warm days now and it is easy to see where some bermudagrass is not greening back up. The combination of cold January temperatures and shade from trees are the simple culprit. On January 6th we got a few inches of snow. Most of it melted the next week but the shaded areas did not melt fully. Temperatures plummeted January 19th through the 22nd creating ice and direct cold stress. Four days of the high not getting above freezing and the lows dropping to single digits dinged up our shade areas.  We manage 200 acres of bermudagrass. We are going to sod out 1 acre. That is .5%. Do you want to imagine what we would look like after that winter if we had not been so diligent with tree removal and drainage work every winter? As the temperatures continue to warm and we finally get some rain, the sod will root in and we will be back to normal before the end of May.  Not a single patch of sod going down sits in a full sun situation. We do basically everythi...