Back in the 1950's and 60's the USGA recommended to golf courses in the 'transition zone' many different approaches to consistently growing grass year-round. One of these suggestions was planting common bermuda--even as far north as New Jersey. Well, as you can imagine, this approach, despite evidence of it being implemented at such places as Pine Valley, didn't exactly work out. Most courses that experimented with common bermuda eventually gave up and went back to more common grasses found in the Northeast--bent, fescues, etc.
My course in Southern New Jersey was one of these clubs that planted common bermuda in the 60's. In 2006 the golf course underwent a complete restoration that included gassing and then regrassing of all tees, fairways, greens, and roughs. In 2010, during the extreme heat of the summer time, small spots of common bermuda began showing up--specifically in the middle of several fairways and on several banks of bunkers.
At first it wasn't seen as much of a problem, but after the summer we had in 2011 with 4-5 straight days near 100 degrees, with high humidity, the bermuda began proliferating. Earlier in the year our superintendent tried several methods of eradication, none of which seemed to do the trick after this summer. The most severe method was cutting out the areas of bermuda in the fairway down about six inches, applying 4x the recommended dosage of Basamid, covering the area for a week, and then resodding. With six weeks--at about the height of the summer heat-- small sprigs of bermuda began to reappear. I'm not sure a nuclear winter is going to kill this stuff.
So all of that being said, has anyone run into this problem??? Obviously we hope a very harsh winter will do some of the job for us, but assuming we're in a weather pattern that will bring another hot and humid summer to New Jersey, we're really looking for any tricks folks may know or have heard about.
Thanks!