Make sure your not dealing with Dallisgrass. This stuff is difficult to get rid of. Literally have to dig it up. I fought with this stuff this year and still have more to get out. Seemed to be worse this year.
Dallisgrass is a perennial grass and it comes back every year from roots so a spring applied preventer to take care of annual grasses like crabgrass that grow from seed each year does not work.
lol
Bent grass greens are on about 70% of golf courses in tenn Because of the climate but if you insist I will go find proof to calm you down
Just googled Tennessee golf courses using bent grass and the first article that came up stated that most golf courses in TN are switching to Bermuda because bent grass can't take the summer heat.
dithiopyr for crabgrass prevention.. its pre and post emergent, stay away from pendimethalin (originally invented for use as a yellow dye).. (dithiopyr) is in the stagreen products at lowes, vigoro at home depot, scotts sucks.. if you live in the deep south with st augustine or zoysia u would use something different. i buy concentrate from coop and spray.
when wanting to kill weeds but not grass use trimec ... which is 24d , mcpp, and dicamba
when wanting to kill everything get imazipyr and mix with a little glyphosate. imazipyr is very thick and will stop up your sprayers but is the best thing in the world for a ditch, fenceline, or gravel driveway. nothing will grow there for a few years
small trees and brush add edict to the above mixture
large trees use harvey updikes spike 80df
It's a double edged sword.
Pick your poison.
Summer heat or winter cold
The champions Bermuda is the new thing but it has to be covered when it below 35 I think
I play two courses in central GA with outstanding bent greens. Bent is the best surface to putt on imo. It requires a time and money investment to circulate air and/or hand water or mist to prevent wilt, but nothing rolls like bentgrass.Bentgrass is an outdated, poorly suited turfgrass for the South. It does not tolerate heat well, is bumpy to putt on, has poor color, and does not like poor drainage. This entire discussion is silly. All of the dwarf Bermudas are much better options and any decent golf course in the South uses it. They tried to make all of the Bear Trace golf courses uniformly Bentgrass and had to redo just about all the greens. Is there some Winter die back in Tif varieties? Yes, but all the grasses have some Winter die back.
Since we're wayyy off topic and you guys are giving free advice: I live in N. AL, get my bermuda yard treated, and for the most part it looks pretty good. I haven't aerated in about 18 months, and get mixed reviews on when to do it. The consensus is to do it when it's hottest here, around late July, after a good rain. Thoughts? Lol. I also have friends who swear by burning their yards in February. My lawn guys say unnecessary and that some thatch is a good thing. Thanks in advance. Haha. Sorry, mods, as well.![]()
Of course, one of the biggest topics of the week has been the playing conditions on Shields-Watkins Field last week against North Texas and what they might be like next week against Vanderbilt. On Monday, officials met again to examine the conditions and what could be done about them. Director of the field Darren Seybold and his boss director of facilities Kevin Zurcher met with former field manager Bobby Campbell, along with a professor from the turf grass program on the ag campus, inside Neyland Stadium to examine things. It was the first time Campbell has been consulted but Seybold has had conversations with a couple of professors from the ag campus in the past. Tennessee officials also have consulted with the Tennessee Titans, which once had the NFL's worst field but since has greatly improved a playing surface that receives lots of extra use.
The bottom line from most experts we have spoken with is that there's basically nothing they can do to fix the field this coming week for Vanderbilt --- and suffice to say people on campus are intently monitoring the weather forecast for next week as well, we're told, breathing a mixed sigh of relief for the kickoff time. From an atmosphere and recruiting standpoint, a night game would have been preferable. But there was concern about potential field conditions at night --- especially if temps were at or below freezing.
To improve playing conditions there remains talk of putting sand on the field like they did the practice field (as we mentioned in last week's war room). That however is not a complete fix as we saw guys continue to slip some on the practice field this week.
The focus and the goal at this point is to seek any option to make the field better for next Saturday then following the season there will be more discussions on trying to fix and prevent the issues next season. Those we have spoken with indicate no one is advocating or pushing for an artificial surface. However as it was said to Volquest this week, if the choice is the conditions as they are now and turf then the answer is going to be different.
Once the season is over, it's going to be very interesting to see who they consult with and how that's done to prepare for 2016.
In addition to examining all things field, Tennessee has examined the cleats as well to make sure they aren't contributing to the problem.
We want to make sure we look at every possible reason for why our players might not be able to play at full speed, one source said.
And the issues of the field has been brought up to the others as well. It's our understanding that either this year or in a recent year, a visiting SEC team filed a letter with the league office in regards to Tennessee's field, according to a source.
I play two courses in central GA with outstanding bent greens. Bent is the best surface to putt on imo. It requires a time and money investment to circulate air and/or hand water or mist to prevent wilt, but nothing rolls like bentgrass.
Since we're wayyy off topic and you guys are giving free advice: I live in N. AL, get my bermuda yard treated, and for the most part it looks pretty good. I haven't aerated in about 18 months, and get mixed reviews on when to do it. The consensus is to do it when it's hottest here, around late July, after a good rain. Thoughts? Lol. I also have friends who swear by burning their yards in February. My lawn guys say unnecessary and that some thatch is a good thing. Thanks in advance. Haha. Sorry, mods, as well.![]()
