Across the UK this summer, bowling greens are being baked in the intense summer heat. Weeks of hot, dry weather have left surfaces bare, cracked, and rock-hard. For many clubs, the underlying soil has crossed into a more serious condition — hydrophobicity — where the soil physically repels water, a phenomenon known as Localised Dry Patch.
If that’s where your green is today, you’ve got a problem.
You can simply can’t wait until your usual mid-September renovation programme to put things right, as a successful renovation will be difficult if not impossible with greens in their current state.
Why Waiting Is Not an Option
Renovation time is when greens should be at their healthiest, moisture in the soil, turf actively growing, roots well-fed, ready to withstand scarifying, aeration, and oversowing.
But if your green is still hydrophobic and bone dry in September:
- Aerators could break up the surface and bounce instead of cleanly penetrating.
- Seedlings from oversowing will fail — germinating in the top few millimetres only to wither days later.
- The renovation you pay for will have almost no lasting effect.
Clubs in this position will spend the autumn throwing money at a programme that was doomed before it even started.
The Recovery Window Is NOW
If your green is suffering from Localised Dry Patch or severe drought stress, you must spend the coming weeks recovering soil moisture before you even think about autumn renovation.
That means:
- Breaking through the hydrophobic layer.
- Restoring the soil’s ability to accept and hold water.
- Rehydrating the rootzone so your turf can recover ahead of autumn.
The Proven One-Two Punch: AquaStasis + BioActive Yucca
This is where AquaStasis and BioActive Yucca come in, used together in an intensive recovery programme that has already been a lifeline for many clubs this year.
- AquaStasis produces protease enzymes that target and break down the waxy, water-repelling proteins that cause Localised Dry Patch. This unlocks the soil so water can finally penetrate again.
More on AquaStasis → - BioActive Yucca is a fully natural, certified organic wetting agent and biostimulant. It improves water infiltration, helps moisture spread evenly through the soil profile, and supports microbial life to aid long-term recovery.
More on BioActive Yucca →
The Recovery Programme
Here’s what works — and what needs to start today:
- Tine the surface to open the soil. You might have to go gently with this, or even start by hand pricking with a fork.
- Apply AquaStasis (750g in at least 70 litres of water per green application) with BioActive Yucca.
- Pre-dilute AquaStasis in water before adding to your sprayer.
- Apply in two passes at right angles for full coverage.
- Repeat weekly or as spot treatments, with frequent hand soaking using a hose to push water into the rootzone.
You’ll see results fastest where the surface is regularly soaked after treatment — AquaStasis needs moisture to work.
Is this the New Normal?
This summer’s weather isn’t a one-off.
Extreme heatwaves and prolonged dry spells are now a regular part of the UK bowling calendar. The old model of throwing more sand on the green every year, hoping things will even out, is not just outdated, it’s actively making drought recovery harder.
I’ve written extensively on why blindly adding sand is a dangerous long-term trap:
Your Autumn Renovation Depends on This
The choice is stark:
- Act now with an intensive AquaStasis + BioActive Yucca programme, restore moisture, and go into September with a more healthy, still recovering, but receptive green…
- Or wait, and risk a renovation that fails before it starts, wasting money and leaving your green in poor shape for another year.
The window to turn this around is short. Let’s not waste it.
📦 Order now and start your recovery programme this week:
Full application guide included with Aquacept (look in your account area for the download after purchase, or drop a line to John)



Hi John
We’ve been having problems with our green for a couple of years now.
Un even lots of LDP’s etc etc.
Weve had a specialist company in and they are recommending a full renovation, taking 2-3 inches off the top, leveling and relaying.etc
What would the time scale of a full recovery be, from start and back to a playing surface.
Thanks
Hi Chris
You’d be best to ask the contractor for a guide and some guarantees on that as it could vary widely depending on the approach taken and on who is responsible for grow-in.
The renovation part will be easy, but the critical period is going to be the grow-in/re-establishment so I would make sure they plan to have a hand in that and can give you a timescale for re-opening.
If LDP and an uneven surface are the main reasons for your decision making process on this, I would specifically ask them for some reassurance on paper about that and to be specific about the work they are doing on each front to guarantee an improvement, as simply removing 2 or 3 inches of soil and re-laying the green probably won’t be enough to rid the green of LDP.
Regards
John