Our goal is to keep our average VWC for each green around 10-13% as we have found this is optimum for playability and health of the greens. Our wilting point is around 6% and our saturation point is anything 20% or higher.
This is a look at the LDS area from #1 green the reading taking above with the 12% VWC. |
This is right after I hand watered the area hitting this particular spot two times. |
This is a good example of an area that does not need hand watering which was next to the LDS spot on #1 green. |
I took this reading at the same LDS spot on #1 green the following morning, the spot stayed within our acceptable range showing that it received the proper amount of water. |
LDS area the next morning on #1 green. |
This photo shows the area where I got the 26.2% VWC reading from . |
Thanks for this. The greens have been much better than last year. One question (three different ways). How does the VMC wilting point change with cut height? Is there a trade off between speed of greens versus firmness? Is it easier to maintain firm greens if they are not running at 10+ on the stimp?
ReplyDeleteNow the greens are nice and firm, but the fairways are wet, the front pins are inaccessible. A long iron landing on the green bounces to the back but if it land just short it stays there. Could you blog about the water content of the fairways please, and how we plan to get to firm and fast conditions, as it is a stated goal on the tpcstonebrae website.
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