the definitive guide to achieving a performance bowling green, this 100 page eBook takes you though the process step by step. More details.
Author: John
Master Greenkeeper John Quinn is the author of Performance Bowling Greens, and several other titles on Greenkeeping, Club and Business Management.
Deeper Faster Bigger…Better…Not in Bowls Green Maintenance!
Next question to ask as a matter of urgency:
Does anyone have plans to get rid of compaction once and for all by hiring in a guy with a tractor and a big spiker that can go in 12, 16, 18, 20 inches? You add your own number here.
Pointers:
- Compaction is an on-going issue; it’s natural and happens due to play, maintenance, weather etc.
- There are of course factors that make compaction worse or better such as soil type and maintenance.
- You can’t “get rid” of compaction once and for all; compaction management is an on-going bowling green maintenance task.
- Compaction relief is best tackled mainly throughout the winter months by old fashioned (unfashionable) deep slit tining to 6-8 inches depth.
- Green flooding is more commonly caused by thatch than compaction
- Deeper isn’t better in this case; anything deeper than 8 inches risks damaging the subgrade of your green permanently.
- Don’t take a tractor on your green please!
Transforming your Bowls Green-the knowledge.
I keep going on about healthy living soil and healthy living turf and healthy living bowling greens on this site.
In my eBook Performance Bowling Greens, a practical guide, I focus heavily on the process of turning bowling greens back in to healthy living eco systems that are pretty much self sustaining.
By self sustaining I mean that they are in a condition that allows them to be set up and prepared for play in a consistently high performance manner with no pesticides and minimal on-going in-put costs.
This relies on the green being converted from a barren, sand laden, resource swallowing beast that is unpredictable at best and disappointing and expensive at worst.
This conversion process demands two qualities in those who seek to deliver a Performance Bowling Green:
Knowledge, that you are doing the right thing and the Patience to spend the time following the program.
Performance Bowling Greens spells out this process in great detail, but here in basic terms are the key points of knowledge that are important to a successful transition:
- Soil micro-life is critically important; this refers to the microscopic life in all soils and includes beneficial fungi which help plants to assimilate nutrients (which fungicides get rid of), and soil microbes, which help to turn organic matter (mainly thatch) into plant useable nutrient ions.
- Every time you add sand to the green, the abundance of soil micro-life reduces; sand is inert.
- Sandy soils generally have a lower Cation Exchange Capacity (the ability to retain the plant useable nutrient ions created by the soil microbes).
- There are two distinctly different kinds of pore space in soils; micro or capillary pore space where plant roots take up moisture and nutrients; and macro or aeration pore space where drainage occurs (to stop the soil from being saturated with water), and oxygen (critical to maintaining a large population of soil microbes) is held.
- Compaction ruins the structure of the soil and reduces aeration pore space, oxygen content and soil microbe populations. This is why compacted greens seem to need more and more fertiliser. Compaction + More Fertiliser = Thatch and so the downward spiral into the Circle of Decline begins.
These are 5 guiding principles if you like for a consistently high performance green. You will notice that this is not a list of things to do, but a list of key things to keep in mind, to focus on as we patiently go about the transition process. You can be confident that if you are heading in this direction you are heading in the right direction regardless of how long the road is.
And you can be confident that the view will improve (in the shape of performance) around every corner of that road.
Aeration
Aeration describes a range of mechanical operations used to improve the air content of the soil on bowling greens. Soil air content is reduced mostly by he perennial turf problems of Thatch and Soil Compaction.
Aeration can be sub-divided into surface and sub-surface aeration practices.
Surface aeration usually Read more
Bowls Social Network
Getting started on bowls-central’s new social network is easy. In a few minutes you can be set up and start benefiting from the many new features the social network brings to the site and its members.
To get started just Register and you will be up and running in minutes.
Use the top most menu on the any page to register for your free membership and to organise and manage your profile and the type of content you want to get involved with.
What is a Member?
Everyone who signs up to bowls central is a member of the community and is free to use all of the site features including:
Activity Streams
Activity Streams allow you to keep track of the information you are following on the site. Global, personal, and group activity streams with single-stream view. Included are threaded commenting, status updates, favourites, @mentions, RSS feeds, and email notifications.
User Groups
You can join user groups; I’ve set up some initial special interest groups and members are free to join any of these or request a new group specific to their interests.
Groups can be public, private or hidden to allow members to break the discussion down into specific topics.
Forums
Each user group has its own fully featured discussion forum to allow for more in-depth conversations between members. Simply add to an existing discussion or start your own in the forum that best suits the topic. If it isn’t there just request a new user group and forum and you’ll be up and running straight away.
Private Messaging
Private messaging allows members to talk to each other directly, in private. Members can even send messages to multiple recipients at a time.
Friend Connections
Members can make friend connections so they can track the activity of each other, and focus on the people they are most interested in.
Member Settings
Members can change their notification options and sensitive account information, for example to be notified by email when new activity occurs in a group they are interested in.
Future Developments
We will continue to add further features as and when they are available or by demand. This will include making it possible for every member to set up their own blog.
So don’t delay…join up today and join in the conversation on bowls central social! You can register here.