I came across something interesting while on Hogan's site: Double Time ryegrass, which is tetraploid. It claims to have deeper roots. Reading about tetraploids online, it also seems they're less dense, so it might be interesting in mixes.
Much of my lawn mainly has a mix of:DTTG13 said:Yes first post...
Like I mentioned in my last post I have tried many varieties of PRG over the years (Sideways, Penguin II, Natural Knit, ASP1001, ASP0112, ASP0113, Zoom, Secretariat GLS, Harrier, Edge II, Private, Tee Lee, Frontier, Singular, Mighty, PNW, Aspire, RPR, Thrive, Hancock and a few more I can't remember lol).
I am very happy with the Double Time GLS. For the price I paid for it and the results I have received so far it will become my go to PRG for seeding/overseeding. No more experimenting. lol . However, it does grow faster than other PRG's. Also when I seed/overseed I usually add some elite varieties of KBG in the hopes that one of the newer varieties will actually flourish here in the PNW. So far still looking for that magic bullet.
Thanks for the welcome Green and I'll look into the lawn journal.
I stumbled upon the reading on the double time PRG. How the cultivator holding up? The seed seems very promising and I may be interested in adding it to my overseeding next fall.DTTG13 said:I just overseeded with it this spring in my back yard. I bought it from Vista seeds. I actually wanted their version called Double Up but was sent Double Time which I think could possibly be the same thing since Proseed and Vista seeds seem to be related.
It's a little too early to tell how the grass will be long term, but as of now I'm really liking it. It has good color, cuts well, handles and recovers from stress well and so far has been able to survive in places where I had difficulty growing grass.
I am hoping with it's deeper roots it will require less water as it already appears to be the case.
I have used many elite varieties of perennial ryegrass in my yard over the years but Double Time could be my favorite
The acid test will be over the winter as the last few years I've had a lot of die out in certain areas (thus the reason for the overseed). If it survives I'll overseed the front yard with it next year.
This one from Bailey seeds looks interesting as well: http://baileyseed.com/products/actress-perennial-ryegrass/
Seems that double time may be pretty resistant to the cold. Their tech sheet claims that it continues to grow even if it drops below 43 degrees and stays green year round.Green said:Yeah, our climate is rough on PR at both ends of the temp range. It does seem to do better in mixes, though.
And that's the big question. Previous research on Tetraploids in general has pointed to them tending to be worse in heat up this point, compared to Diploids. We'll have to see. I hope anyone using them reports back on this.Scagfreedom48z+ said:With it being used mostly in sport turf situations, I wonder how it handles heat.
Thank you for the update! I live up in the northeast so we have a combination of both extremes. Cold in the winter and hot/humid in the summer. Disease is a big thing in turf because of the humidity. From your experiences, it definitely seems to be more on the positive side that negative.DTTG13 said:As mentioned I overseeded with Double Time GLS this spring, so my observations aren't time tested, but I have come to some preliminary conclusions.
On the plus side, I would say Double Time GLS is more shade tolerant and traffic tolerant than the other perennial ryegrasses I've tried. It also appears to be more resilient, in that I've been able to maintain it in areas where other ryegrasses have died out prematurely. As far as color goes, it would probably land in the very dark category, but it's not the darkest I've tried. That would have to go to ASP0112. Disease resistance has so far been very good. It also germinates slightly faster than the diploids.
As far as heat tolerance goes, I found that it performed better than the diploid ryegrasses I've tried in the past. As Green was saying there is contradictory information in regards to the performance of Tetraploids in hot and drought conditions. On the one hand, Tetraploids are marketed for overseeding southern turf in the winter because they allow for a better transition in the spring. Which would suggest the Tetraploids die out quicker and more thoroughly in heat than regular diploids. However the marketing also touts the grasses drought tolerance and deep roots. So I guess the verdict is still out.
The downsides would be that it is not very dense and should be mixed with another perennial ryegrass or other cool season grass. Also the blade is slightly wider than the diploids.
For me the advantages outweigh the minuses. I bought another 50lb bag and plan to overseed the front yard with it this year. Disease pressure in the PNW is high, so we're limited to perennial ryegrasses, fine fescues and bentgrass. I don't really care for the look of bentgrass or fine fescue, so I'm pretty much stuck with rye. I might try some TTTF mixed with KBG in the back yard this year to see if any of the new cultivars can survive better here, but I don't have my hopes up.
Thanks. I know Hogan has a different brand, not sure about this one...but worth asking I guess. This brand is rated really well. The Gray Leaf resistant one would be ideal.DTTG13 said:I think they only sell 50lb bags, but you could always give it a try. When I bought mine I emailed them and they got back to me pretty quick. I think Hogan sells it as well and sounds like they do smaller quantities. I'd send you some of mine, but I already split the bag with my father in law.
I'm just curious...why doesn't KBG or TTTF do well up there in the PNW?Green said:Much of my lawn mainly has a mix of:DTTG13 said:Yes first post...
Like I mentioned in my last post I have tried many varieties of PRG over the years (Sideways, Penguin II, Natural Knit, ASP1001, ASP0112, ASP0113, Zoom, Secretariat GLS, Harrier, Edge II, Private, Tee Lee, Frontier, Singular, Mighty, PNW, Aspire, RPR, Thrive, Hancock and a few more I can't remember lol).
I am very happy with the Double Time GLS. For the price I paid for it and the results I have received so far it will become my go to PRG for seeding/overseeding. No more experimenting. lol . However, it does grow faster than other PRG's. Also when I seed/overseed I usually add some elite varieties of KBG in the hopes that one of the newer varieties will actually flourish here in the PNW. So far still looking for that magic bullet.
Thanks for the welcome Green and I'll look into the lawn journal.
ASP1001GL, ASP6001, ASP6003, several other ASP cultivars that escape me at the moment, Zoom, several other Champion cultivars (possibly Zoom and SR4600), and/or Fiesta 4...mixed with America, Rugby II, Bewitched and other unknown KBG cultivars, and various TTTF (Bullseye, Firecracker S/LS, Flame/NoNet, Titanium II LS), and/or FF (unknown, Garnet, and Chantilly).
The ASPs are definitely stoloniferous/spreading to some extent (based on my own examination), and the Fiesta 4 (and possibly Zoom and SRxxxx) is advertised as such.
In the low-input area, the same ASP cultivars and some of the same KBG and FF cultivars, as well as Wicked TTPR, and some of the TTTFs I've been adding more recently because they do much better in our climate than TTPR--including Barenbrug cultivars, etc. I may also add a new KBG cultivar this year...Mercury....in the dead spots. And Myholidaylawn possibly.
We have the opposite situation here...KBG and TTTF are best, while TTPR eventually tends to die out. We do get overrun by Bentgrass, too, in some cases over time...or Poa annua and Poa trivialis.