Why do putting green grasses turn red, blue, or
purple? The cool to cold temperatures trigger the color responses. During mid
to late December and into January, many regions experience relatively warm days
(65 to 75°F; 17 to 24°C), but cool nights (32 to 55°F; 0 to 13°C). The sunny,
bright, and warm days stimulate plants to produce large amounts of sugars
(through photosynthesis) in leaf blades and sheathes. At night, the sugars must
be translocated out of the leaves to crowns for storage or use in other
physiological processes. When nights are very cool or frosty the sugars are not
completely moved out of the leaves and they accumulate. There are many types of
sugars. Glucose is a common plant sugar and sometimes glucose molecules are
chemically bound with anthocyanins. Anthocyanins are pigments and their
function in plants is unclear. They provide the red, purple, and blue colors in
flowers. Anthocyanins are always present in leaves, but normally are masked by
the presence of chlorophyll. They are expressed in the foliage of trees during
cool and bright weather to provide the spectacular colors in autumn leaves. Hence, bentgrasses may experience a similar accumulation of sugar, and
therefore anthocyanins, following the first cool or frosty night of fall. Frost
injury may denature the green chlorophyll, thereby exposing the anthocyanin
pigment. These colors may intensify and persist throughout winter months and
slowly disappear in mid-spring after the turf begins active growth. Note the unique variety of lime green colored poa annua in the middle of the photo.
Opening Sight Corridors
Select pruning of vegetative overgrowth in key areas has opened up lost sight corridors on the golf course. The photo below is the view from the white tee on Hole #13. The image on the left was taken prior to the pruning and the image on the right is the current view, post pruning. Additional pruning on Hole #14 and Hole #16 will take place in the coming days with the same objective in mind.
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