FAQ section
1.
Will Sea
Isle grow with potable
water?
Yes. As with any other warm season grass,
proper management is the key to success
with this grass.
2. Does this grass look like bahiagrass
(Paspalum
notatum) or dallisgrass (Paspalum
dilatatum)?
No. Those two grasses are bunch-types.
Sea
Isle (Paspalum
vaginatum) is a prostrate-growing,
rhizomatous, stoloniferous grass that
resembles bermudagrass.
3. What kind of leaf texture does
this grass have?
The grass ranges from very coarse ornamental
types to coarse types resembling St.
Augustine grass to intermediate types
resembling common bermuda grass to very
fine types like the hybrid bermudagrasses.
This grass takes on a chameleon - like
nature as the mowing height is lowered,
transforming from longer internodes and
wider leaves during the grow-in phase
to very short internodes and smaller,
finer leaves when the mowing height reaches
3mm.
4. Is the color light or dark green?
Sea
Isle has a darker green color than
most bermudas when mowed at the same height
as the bermudas. The leaves have a heavy
wax load on them that gives the appearance
of a glisteny, shiny green luster.
5. Does a lot of morning dew settle
on the greens?
No. Because of the heavy wax load and
lack of leaf hairs on the leaves, very
little moisture accumulates on Sea
Isle. Bermudagrass
will look white with heavy morning dew.
Sea
Isle will look bright green.
6. Does Sea
Isle have a thatch problem?
As long as fertiliser nitrogen is applied
at less than 2.5kg/100msq per annum and
irrigation scheduling is appropriate,
thatch buildup will normally be minimal.
Most Sea
Isle sports turf use will require
one or two verticutting/slicing events
annually.
7. Does Sea
Isle have drought tolerance?
Yes. As long as irrigation scheduling
is infrequent and of sufficient duration
to promote deep rooting. Light, short
duration irrigation schedules will keep
the roots shallow (this grass is highly
responsive
to its microenvironment), and will
diminish its drought
tolerance capability.
8. Can you actually use
ocean water for irrigation?
Yes. With proper management of the salts.
9. Can this grass be covered with water
and still survive?
Yes. If floods or storm surges in coastal
areas or rising water tables in low areas
persist, this grass will survive. It loves
low, boggy, "wet-feet" areas.
10. Why is this grass not well known
in the turf industry?
The dominance of bermudagrass
and the development of hybrid
bermudagrasses really brought recognition
to turf quality, cosmetic appearance,
and performance traits in the warm
season grasses. Water was plentiful
and fertiliser was cheap in the 20th century.
The advent of environmental concerns/compliance
and water quality/quantity issues are
changing the turf industry in the 21st
century. Sea
Isle will be the primary turfgrass
to emerge in a new era of environmental
stewardship.
11. What is the origin for this grass?
All the fine-textured types evolved on
sand dunes in South Africa and have been
transported to other countries. A secondary
center of origin is thought to be Argentina-Brazil
coastal areas.