Practical Considerations
These results demonstrate the value of educating golfers about management costs. Doing so may cause them to reevaluate higher-input approaches and increase their acceptance of lower-input options. It’s important to note that in this study, survey participants only made visual assessments, and they only evaluated plots a single time during the season. In future research, it would be useful to assess playability based on actual play and to assess both playability and quality throughout a growing season when turf is subject to traffic and other wear. It would also be valuable to revisit management costs and survey assessments after several years. We experienced timely rainfall during our study and our plots were not trafficked. It’s likely that our lower-input – specifically the non-fertilized and/or non-irrigated treatments – would have lower quality and potentially extensive turf loss over a number of dry seasons, which may change golfer assessments of these programs.
References
Amundsen, K., Thompson, C., Kreuser, W., & Gaussoin, R. (2024). Management costs influence golfer perceptions of turfgrass quality and playability. International Turfgrass Society Research Journal, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1002/its2.160
Golf Course Superintendents Association of America (GCSAA). (2024). 2024 Maintenance budget survey. GCSAA. https://www.gcsaa.org/facility/operations-surveys-reports
Shearman, R.C., Riordan, T.P., Abeyo, B.G., Heng-Moss, T.M., Lee, D.J., Gaussoin, R.E., Gulsen, O., Budak, H., & Serba, D.D. (2006). Buffalograss: Tough native turfgrass. USGA Turfgrass and Environmental Research Online, 5(21). https://usgatero.msu.edu/v05/n21.pdf