I seem to recall reading somewhere that you have to put in a physical barrier between the grasses used for the putting surface and those used for the surrounds or the more vigorous grasses will overwhelm the gentler types. Has invasion of more rampant grasses been an issue where green surfaces have shrunk?
Mark
at my club, we are endeavouring to run a 'three grass' policy:
- greens a mixture of (predominantly) bent with some poa,
- about 10 yards of soft grass surrounds, comprising a mixture of fescue, rye and bent
- fairways of warm season grass. We use a santa anna couch (bermuda hybrid), although there are some better alternatives in use in Australia these days (Legend looks good).
At Kingston Heath and Metropolitan, they use a 2-grass greens/surrounds policy. Pure santa anna (Metro is gradually replacing wintergreen with santa anna) on fairways and surrounds, then bent for greens (Metropolitan use dominant - 1019/1020, Kingston Heath use A1). The important thing is the the shade intolerance of santa anna. If the adjacent bent can be kept healthy, the santa anna will not invade into the bent surface. Other warm season grasses might, but not santa anna. Hard to believe until you see it.
Regarding coring build-up, we have adopted a different approach for the last two spring corings. We saw this method in use at Royal Sydney (I think) in 2004. We undertake a three day haeavy coring program of greens and surrounds AT THE SAME TIME. 6 holes per day. We are trying to manage the thatch build-up in the surrounds just as much as the greens. It is no point having 'firm and fast' greens when the surrounds are slow and soft at best, either through winter rains or summer irrigation. Plus, you need to keep the surrounds well drained and decompacted to get the deep roots necessary to survive summer drought, especially with soft grasses. In our case, the ideal maintenance meld (
) requires we attend to the total greeens complex in one go. It also works well in reducing the disruption to members, although they have struggled with the idea of a 12 hole course for three days, and working out which 6 holes they play to make 18 is very dificult (for some).
By the way, we have returning nines, but with a tweak, we also have three loops of six. But anything less than the full 18 holes is a compromise for the members.
James B