Erik:
I nderstand the concept of why they try to develop new turf. The “whatever” part I’m not so clear on. In this case, they are using Bermuda grass from China and Africa, not refining the Bermuda grass they have been studying for years. Courses in the south re-turf their courses all the time, trying to find the next best grass. If the grass is better and cheaper, then why do they keep changing their grasses? All of this re-turfing cost money. It’s really a lot of marketing. My point is they are looking for some kind of breakthrough that they haven’t achieved in over 100 years of studying the subject. For $50 million dollars invested in the grasses, what is the return on investment to golfers? Perhaps that $50 million could go into something more constructive, like teaching people how to water their grasses?
Why do they need Bermuda grass in Arizona in February if you’re going to just rip up the sod in two weeks? The reason they used Tahoma 31 is marketing and this time it may have backfired.