Renovation from A1/A4 to Champion Bermudagrass...
Steven Harris, CGCS, Brier Creek Country Club, Raleigh, NC:
Small spots of 419 were sprayed out with a backpack sprayer.
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"Tuesday, June 12: And the Renovation Starts Now... Yesterday we began the process of changing our A1/A4 bentgrass greens to Champion Ultradwarf bermudagrass. This week we will be spot spraying Round-Up on all of the 419 bermudagrass contamination throughout the greens. We will also be spraying a ring around the greens to create a crisp, defined edge that we will then use as the guide for sprigging the Champion in two weeks.
The bermudagrass contamination must be sprayed at least twice to ensure that it is all killed. Once we switch to Champion it is almost impossible to remove any non-Champion contamination.
The plywood is used to create a crisp edge and not overspray into the collars.
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In a couple of days you will begin to notice brown patches where we have sprayed out the contamination and most notably, a brownish ring around all of the greens where we have re-defined the edge.
Monday, June 18th: This morning we began the process of spraying the greens with Round-Up to remove the existing bentgrass and get a second spray on the 419 bermudagrass contamination and edges. As many of you who played late last week and over the weekend have already seen, the Round-Up is working. There is a very pronounced dead ring around all of the greens (below left) and large spots in the centers of the greens that have died.
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The entire green surface was sprayed this morning to make way for the Champion bermudagrass. Over the next several days you will see the greens gradually turn brown. Due to widespread bermudagrass contamination, the entire practice putting green was sprayed last week. It is now almost entirely brown. This is what the greens will begin to look like.
Sunday, June 24: Today is the last day of play on the old bentgrass putting greens here at Brier Creek. Tomorrow we will be closing the greens down for 8 weeks to renovate them to Champion bermudagrass. This grass will perform significantly better through the summer heat than the bentgrass has the past few years.
Last Monday the entire green surfaces were sprayed with a Roundup mixture supplied to us by Champion Turf Farms. By Thursday the greens were certainly showing the effects.
Dedication to the project: Don Smith helps out on the verticutter all day!
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Monday, June 25th: Monday morning we began performing the necessary steps to prepare the greens at Brier Creek to be sprigged with Champion bermudagrass. There is a tremendous amount of work that must be completed before the greens are ready to plant so the crew got started first thing Monday morning. We even had a guest on our maintenance team: our General Manager, Don Smith, pulled some skills from years ago and helped us out for the day.
The first step in the preparing the greens is to remove as much dead leaf material from the old bentgrass as possible. This is done by using a verticutter (much like a de-thatching machine you would use on your home yard) set as deep as it could go. We verticut the greens three times then followed with a greensmowers set to 0.105" to scalp whatever was left standing up. We removed quite a bit of material, but we weren't done yet!
We finished the first step at about 5:30 Monday evening. All the greens had been verticut three times and mowed with the walk mower. There was a lot of material gone, but still quite a bit remaining. We decided that the greens needed one more round of verticutting and then followed by a steel drag mat run across them to further stand up the grass. We then mowed one more time with a riding mower that allowed us to set the height even lower (~0.100")
We finished a few more greens Monday and finally called it quits at around 8:30 that night.
A sod cutter provided a crisp edge between the future Champion greens and the 419 surrounds.
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Tuesday June 26th: Although we accomplished a lot of work on Monday, there was a significant workload still remaining. The goal for Tuesday was to finish the final verticutting and mowing, sod cut a clean edge around each green, then get all of the greens aerified.
The crew got back to the golf course at 5:30 Tuesday morning. We finished verticutting, dragging and scalping the greens for a final time.
After the verticutting and scalping was finished, we then took a sod cutter and cut a crisp edge around all of the greens. This will help provide a nice, defined edge between the new Champion and the existing 419 bermudagrass.
We aerified aggressively with 5/8" tines on 1" centers.
| Working sand across the surface after aerification.
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After the edges were cut and the sod was removed, we began aerifying. We aerified with 5/8" tines on 1" centers. This was a very aggressive hole spacing with the idea of removing even more organic material.
We then had to drag the plugs and smooth the surface back out. We blew off the debris from the dead bentgrass and all that was left was sand to work back across the surface.
It was another long day but we finished aerifying and dragging all the greens on Tuesday. We called it a day at 7:30 and prepared for Wednesday."
We'll have more from Brier Creek next week. In a hurry? Visit Steven's blog at briercreekgcmaintenance.blogspot.com.
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