Kings Hill on trial!
19-04-2010
It’s not often in one’s greenkeeping career that opportunities come along to be at the forefront of new technical innovations within our industry. Duncan Kelso, Course Manager at Kings Hill Golf Club, enjoyed the experience, as he explains.
If, like me, you are fascinated by turf
and, in particular, turf associated
with golf and dominated with fescues
and bents, then products that can
give you an advantage in outcompeting
the less desirable coarse grasses that might invade your swards are
going to be of interest.
This is exactly how I felt back in early
2007 when I got a phone call from Simon
Barnaby of Syngenta. “Can you do some
trial work for me, I’ve got a product you
might be interested in” was the message.
“Let’s meet up and I will explain further.”
So, a few days later we met and Simon
explained that Syngenta wanted to
evaluate a new product that would
effectively remove coarse grass from fine
turf swards without damaging the finer
grasses. If the trials were successful then
the product would be launched onto the
market and greenkeepers would have
something in their toolbox for combating
the age-old problem of dealing with
coarse grass effectively.
Rye infestation on fairway
I have been course manager at Kings
Hill Golf Club since its inception some
fourteen years age. It was built during the
last golf boom of the early nineties and,
like many of that period, was built on
land that had had a number of previous
uses. Kings Hill was a mixture of old
WW2 airfield, arable, fruit and hop fields,
so ranged from some established mature
grassland on the airfield to unmanaged
scrubby hop gardens on the other. As you
can imagine, after the first few years
where the majority of fescues sown during
the construction had established well, the
golf course looked and played extremely
well.
Close-up of rye infestation on fairway
However, after a few droughts and an
increase in play, coupled with the usual
seasonal cycles of weather, some areas of
the course, particularly where
construction issues had prevailed, started
to show signs that the seed bank from the
original land use was going to become an
issue.
Rye encroaching on to fairway
Coarse weed grasses began invading
and establishing within the dominant
population of fescue and bents. By 2005,
in some areas, we had got to that stage in
every new golf course’s life where clumpy
rye was starting to make the swards look
and play poorly, which didn’t make us
feel great.
Like most greenkeepers who have faced
this situation you have two or three
choices. Mow lower, re-turf, or grin and
bear it until the rye takes over completely
and you have a mixed sward. Fortunately
for us, Simon’s phone call came at just
the right time.
Subsequent visits by Simon, coupled
with course walks to identify areas that
would be part of the trial, followed.
Then, in June 2007, the first bottle of
product arrived with the necessary
instructions for application. Four fairway
areas were chosen for the initial trial, all
displaying rye encroachment into the
fescue bent swards and with varying sizes
of ryegrass patch from 2” up to 12”
diameter. The fairway areas were also
split into fourteen separate one metre
squares that would be receiving different timed applications to see if different
months of the year produced different
levels of success.
Initial applications, in July 2007,
proved positive and, as this was a wet
summer, there were no issues with
product uptake. After fourteen or so days
clorosis had started and the rye grass was
looking decidedly weak. After thirty days
total kill looked inevitable. However, after
a spell of rain, new shoots started to
emerge from the crown of the plants and
re-establishment occurred in a less dense
and slightly more open form. Further
applications in August and September
produced the same result where total kill
of the rye never materialised.
Whilst all this was going on Syngenta
had been working on a new formulation
of the product where an adjuvant would
be used to help the product penetrate the
waxy rye grass leaves. Obviously, from the
initial trial, the product was effective it
just couldn’t finish the plant off.
The new formulation became available
in October 2007 and was in two bottles
that had to be mixed at different rates. It
was also decided at this point to dispense
with the one metre square plots and
chose 1500 to 2500m2 fairway areas as
applications were going to be a few
months apart and limited to two a year.
Again, applications would take place in
different months on different fairways to
gauge effectiveness. The introduction of
different renovation methods would also
be used to see how the larger patches
could be re-established quickly.
The first application of the new
formulation took place in late October
2007 and, again, after fourteen days,
discolouration started. After thirty days
the rye grass had taken on a distinct
reddish appearance and, at this point, we
knew that the introduction of the
adjuvant had benefited the results we
were seeing.
Two months later the winter was well
upon us, and the rye had been
successfully killed. However, it would be
another two months before any
renovation could take place and we would
have to look at dead patches, some 12” in
diameter until the spring.
As April 2008 got underway trials
continued with spring applications to
some areas. Overseeding was also carried
out by mechanical methods on some
fairways while others were divoted. Other
areas would be left to re-establish by
themselves. This would establish time
frames and the most effective method for
dealing with the dead areas.
As the summer progressed it was clear
that re-growth of the patches was taking
place on some of the areas treated in the
spring. However, this time the re-growth
was extremely spindly and weak with the
patches of ryegrass never able to redevelop
to the same extent. It certainly
was never able to stalk and produce seed
like rye would normally do through the
late spring and summer.
The product was acting like a growth
regulator, with the benefits of producing
a much more even playing surface for
much of the year until an autumn application could be made.
Seeding methods were proving
difficult, as germination would take place,
but establishment would be dictated by
the summer weather, as there would be
no overhead irrigation to fairway areas.
Divoting and natural regeneration
seemed to be the best methods in this
instance, as divoting could be done
regularly and the seed would have a
carrier in the soil that would hold any
moisture that fell by way of rain.
On some of the natural reestablishment
areas new rye grass would
grow from the existing patches’ seed
bank, along with some small amounts of
annual meadowgrass. However, this never
really presented any problems as you
always knew you were never very far from
another application.
Late autumn saw the trials reduced in
scale, as we were now concentrating on
two specific fairways to understand a
programme duration for the product.
Fairways 7 and 12 had seen the most trial
work and, coupled with the introduction
of a revised formulation where the
adjuvant would be pre mixed to make
applications easier, 2009 was going to be
the third year of the trial.
By now, on both these fairways, total
rye grass content had reduced by as much
as 75% and all that was left to take care of
were small areas of re-establishment from
the underlying seed bank. Patch size had
reduced to no more than 2” in diameter
and recolonisation of the existing fescue
and regular divoting had restored these
fairways playing surfaces and appearance.
2009 applications would now follow,
with fairway 7 receiving an application in
the spring and autumn, and fairway 12
receiving only an autumn application.
This was now effectively the culmination
of the trial as the product had shown its
effectiveness under most conditions
throughout the last thirty months, with
excellent results.
Considering the amount of applications
that took place over the trial period, at
no time did we have any failures. Some
applications did vary in their level of
control and, don’t forget, we were very
much developing the product to get to a
final formulation. As with any product
local conditions, be they timing, weather
or ground, will have an impact on
expectations. However, by scrutinising the
label and application equipment carefully,
problems with the products effectiveness
can be eliminated
For Kings Hill going forward, a
programmed approach to dealing with
our rye grass invasions can now be put in
place from tee to green and, hopefully, in
the not to distant future this ugly
competitor in fescue/bent swards can be
brought under control.
Trial work for us has been exciting and
brought rewards with our turf ’s
appearance. and I would like to thank
Simon Elsworth and everyone at
Syngenta for listening to greenkeepers
needs, and developing and bringing to
market a first class product that has many
beneficial uses in the presentation and
playing quality of our golf courses.
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