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Hydro-seeding and Hydro-mulching are well-known techniques for establishing seeded varieties of turfgrasses, wildflowers, and groundcovers in all parts of the United States.
"Hydro-Sprigging" is a variation of the technique that is quietly revolutionizing golf course planting of warm season grasses in the desert Southwest and the Hawaiian Islands. At last look, the trend was headed South!
       
Once sprayed in place, the hydro-sprig technique produces superior results. Coverage is more uniform and the course comes into play quicker than when tees, greens, or fairways are mechanically sprigged. Because more of the sprigs survive, operators report that they can get the same coverage as a mechanical planter with fewer sprigs, or get better coverage with the same amount of sprigs. The familiar "row-planting" look and blotchy coverage areas are NOT a characteristic of a hydro-sprigged course.
Mechanical Planting Limitations
Traditionally, hybrid bermuda sprigs or, in the West, "stolons," are harvested and then planted mechanically or by hand. The assumption is that a disc and roller is the best method of making soil contact for the sprig to root. Sprig planters and "pasture planters" abound in the South and have usually provided satisfactory results at a reasonable cost. Large, open, relatively flat areas can be planted quickly with readily available, inexpensive, tractor-drawn equipment.
Mechanical planting is not without serious limitations. If there are rocks in the soil profile, as is the rule in the Southwestern deserts or the Hawaiian Islands, the discing tends to ruin equipment and leave the stolon on the surface. Clay soils gum-up the discs when wet. Higher stolon planting rates are often necessary to assure survival rates of only 40-60% in harsh environments. Too many sprigs are either buried too deep or dry out, resting unprotected on the soil.
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