This has been an excellent thread and most importantly a real valuable "resource" thread, thanks to all the supers on here that contributed and particularly hyperlinked articles of more in-depth resource material. This thread will sink into the back pages but don't worry I'll pop it back up to the front every so often.
I'm aware of a number of clubs that're looking to do some real research into this entire subject----less irrigation, less chemicals, more organics, and basically all for the ultimate goal of vastly improving the playabilities of their golf courses by reestablishing firmer and faster playing conditions which clearly serves to highlight the function of the stratgic options of their courses. Not to mention the fact that these kinds of applied maintenance practices inure agronomy against the types of catostrophic wipe-outs we've seen too often with over-irrigated, chemical reliant, ultra pampered turf. And a number of those clubs look in on this site to help them figure this stuff out.
Joe Hancock said the following and I think it sums up this entire "Turf 101" thread very well;
"It takes several seasons to reap the full benefits of deep and infrequent. If someone does it for a few months and rates the program on that period of time, I guarantee they will turn the water back on.
It takes several seasons to chase out the weaklings and be replaced by the hardy plants. Don't expect miracles over night."
That's the reality and there basically are no shortcuts. I hate to say it but that's also the price a lot of American agronomy is just going to have to pay for too many years of basiclly unhealthy agronomic practices. Clubs that want to do this have to understand they need to commit to it for the duration which could be a number of years. But the results after that time are most certainly worth it, as we can see from the clubs that've done it.
That's one thing I hope this thread has shown. The other is given the necessary time input achieving the ultimate goal is not a simple one-dimensional process even with a long term committment because any golf course's soil and the structure and the make-up of it from course to course is just going to make it very different.
It seems like this thread has proven one thing regarding healthy enduring turf that more consistently provides firm and fast playing conditions, and that is whatever the process and maintenance practices used course to course those roots have got to go deep or deeper. Without that it's just not going to happen. And it's not a hard thing to check---just keep taking core samples and checking the increased length of the roots as you go down this road of less irrigation reliance.
That and minimizing thatch. Thatch is as big an obstacle to firm and fast playing conditions as wet and soft ground. I'm just still not all that clear to what actual extent over-irrigation and excessive thatch go hand in hand.
Thanks for the posts---this thread for me is "printoutable".