Alan,
I like your response.
It always bothers me when superintendents use the computer to replace ET 100%. As noted in one post, ET is the main factor, but available moisture is the real component to determining irrigation need.
For most turfs, if plant moisture falls below 33% of field capacity, poor appearance, death (rye, bent) or dormancy (i.e. Bermuda and Blue) occurs. Thus, most superintendents won’t keep turf right on the edge, except when forced into it by improper water supply or drought. In general practice, they maintain turf in a range between a minimum of 50% to 100% of available moisture. Thus, there is no need in replacing ALL the ET. It isn't necessary except for dessert climates!
I can understand greens that are kept near field capacity for consistency, while tees and fairways may reach 25-50% depletion and roughs may tolerate 60% depletion, where the control system and sprinkler location allows. But, increasing depletion allowances builds drought resistance and saves water.
Replacing all the calculated ET would result in a figure of close to100% of ET replacement. But allowing turf to cycle through from full water capacity to something much drier saves a lot of water.
For others -
Available moisture is measured in inches per foot, so it increases with root depth. Manicured turf roots to 6-18 in., depending on species, soils, season and cultural practices. Watering practices that encourage deep rooting (i.e. deep, infrequent watering) actually improve water availability to turf, and slowly build resistance to drought.
Warm Season Grasses (bermudas, Paspalum and Zoysia can have roots 1.5-5.0' deep.
Cool Season Grasses (Bluegrass, Perennial Ryes, and turf type tall fescues have roots 0.5-1.5' deep.
Creeping Bents and Annual Bluegrass in soil average 0.1-0.3' deep. Properly managed, bent roots in sand greens can reach down nearly the full 12" of sand.
For the midwest, a course might have bent grass tees, greens, and fairways, with a Blue/Fescue mixture for roughs. If we assume the superintendent will achieve average root depth with his maintenance practices, about 50% of the course will average root depth of less than 1 foot (bents) and half about 1.25 feet.
Root depth helps determine available water, and likely maximum days between irrigation to achieve best results.
Available Water to the Turf is calculated by multiplying available water of the soil, typical root depth and allowable depletion. As an example, fairways with six inch roots in clay or silt loam soil with 1.8 in/ft of available water, and an allowable depletion of 50% of capacity have about 0.45 inches of available water:
1.8”in/ft X .5ft (root depth) X 50% (allowable depletion) = available water 0.45”.
When summer ET reaches about 0.22" per day, that fw can be watered every other day. Even when a bit higher being short on water will be made up with natural rain in most climates. In shoulder seasons, every 3rd night watering is possible when ET drops to .15” daily.
Short Version - I think supers need to think in terms of checkbook water availability replacement, not 100% ET replacement. Replacing available root moisture should result in irrigation applications of 33-50% less than ET replacement for total water useage. (I must stress, that is IN THIS EXAMPLE and UNDER PERFECT CONDITIONS)
But, I do know some superintendents who water their fw and greens every 4th day in summer with no ill effects. In part, its becasue they force deeper roots and water availability goes up.