Awesome graphs and cool season grasses!
This trip included one of the best discussion and presentations about Dr. Woods' climate maps and also put me back in touch with cool season turfgrasses. A major issue I saw in Beijing was the desire to start using Kentucky bluegrass throughout the fairways. ...
11
May
2012
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Hong Kong Clouds and Beijing Botanizing
The seminar was at Clearwater Bay, a course with manilagrass tees, fairways, and roughs. We saw a little bit of dollar spot and heard from superintendent Darry Koster about his preventative fungicide program for large patch (caused by Rhizoctonia solani). It gets just cold enough at Hong Kong for large...
08
May
2012
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Two-Wheeled Vehicles and Zoysia Putting Greens
We headed to Twin Doves Golf Club where I had my opportunity to see a wall-to-wall Seashore paspalum (Platinum TE variety) golf course. While the course looked great from a distance, it was clear that the grass selection presented its own challenges. While Micah can talk more about this from...
05
May
2012
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Saigon, San Miguel, and Shade
Except for the superb mountain course at Dalat, with a lot of kikuyugrass (Pennisetum clandestinum) on the fairways and creeping bentgrass (Agrostis stolonifera) greens, all courses at Vietnam have been planted to seashore paspalum or bermudagrass. This is a mistake....
03
May
2012
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Singapore and Thailand from my perspective
Our first stop during the 2012 Asian Turfgrass Roadshow took us to Singapore. For me, it was about 22 hours in the air (through Tokyo) and a 12:30AM arrival on Monday night/Tuesday morning. Knowing that I wasn't going to be able to sleep right off the flight, I had recent...
01
May
2012
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Turfgrass Seminars at Singapore and Bangkok
The Asian Turfgrass Roadshow 2012 started with a seminar at Sentosa Golf Club in Singapore, host site for the European Tour’s Singapore Open. Dr. John Kaminski, with only a few hours of sleep after his travel from the other side of the world, exactly twelve time zones away, gave two...
30
Apr
2012
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Fungicide book, and thinking about summer patch – earlier than usual
It’s been awhile since we’ve plugged this book, so I’ll do it again: It’s a terrific resource for any turfgrass manager. You can find more details about the contents and purchase it at this website: http://www.apsnet.org/apsstore/shopapspress/Pages/43924.aspx Summer patch Summer patch symptoms tend to...
13
Apr
2012
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Frost impacts new growth in lawns
The unprecedented warm weather in March led to all sorts of plant anomalies, including early flowering in trees and shrubs, germination of annual grasses, and spring green-up of cool-season turf. Although perennial cool-season grasses are well equipped to withstand sudden and extreme temperature drops, new, succulent leaf tissues are susceptible...
09
Apr
2012
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Early early early
The temps have been warmer than normal, in some cases WAY warmer. Here in Manhattan it was 89 on April 1. Even the warm-season grasses are growing like mad. Along with the early plant growth, plant diseases are...
06
Apr
2012
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Some Much-Needed Rain and Some Unwanted Diseases
In Oklahoma and the Southern Plains, we received some much-needed rain to help offset the drought that has persisted over the last year or so. Some areas of Oklahoma received as much as six inches of rain over the last 10 days. Many have welcomed this, but it...
26
Mar
2012
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An Excellent Question Without a Good Answer
What's that question? It is the one posed most frequently by delegates to this week's Sustainable Turfgrass Management in Asia 2012 conference: How can we control bermudagrass in seashore paspalum? The conference saw 210 delegates from 20 countries assemble at Thailand's popular beach resort of Pattaya to discuss turfgrass management...
17
Mar
2012
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A New Year and Winter Meetings
Happy belated New Year! I know I haven’t had a recent contribution to the blog, but things got pretty busy for the Turf Team at Oklahoma State University this fall and into the new year. We had our 66th Annual Oklahoma Turfgrass Conference and Trade Show in Stillwater in...
26
Jan
2012
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Greetings. My name is Lee Miller, and I am the extension turf pathologist at the University of Missouri. I was invited to post a few weeks ago, and gratefully accept the invitation. Every once in a while I’ll join in on the fun with my fellow Midwest colleagues (Drs. Kennelly, Kerns, and Smith) to relay on some of my experiences from the region.
As Damon (and the rest of the world) noted, it is hot almost everywhere in the U.S. and creeping bentgrass is dancing on the coals. Frequent syringing of greens is a must, but with this extreme heat, the water coming out of the hose may also be too hot for comfort. During our historically hot summer of 2010, some Missouri superintendents were reporting 90F + water temperatures in their irrigation lakes and coming out of their syringing hoses. That’s not much relief! In addition, traditional syringing can be difficult to master and often times oversaturated root zones can be a side effect. Hot water in a stressed root zone is a recipe for trouble, and turf pathogens love troubled turf…
A local assistant superintendent has rigged up a misting system hooked up to a Buffalo blower to combat the problem. The system has two holding tanks in the back that hold water that is cooled with block ice. Pumps deliver the water to the mouth of the blower, where it is atomized and blown across the putting green (similar to the fan systems that cool off football players on the sidelines). This is not a new idea. In 2006, Patrick Gross wrote a USGA Green Section article on a misting system implemented at Mission Viejo Country Club.
I produced a short video below showing the system in action, and recorded some before and after canopy temperatures taken across the putting surface. This is not a scientific study by any means, and doesn’t compare this practice vs. normal syringing. From a pathological perspective though, I like this cooling method because it allows for more control over root zone moisture. Most of the samples I have looked at this season have very saturated root zones, and as a result, black layer and Pythium root rot have been diagnosed routinely.
I’d like to hear some comments from those that use a misting system and how you have implemented it into your program.
