How do you read grain like the PGA players at Bay Hill this week?
Look at the hole and wherever you see the dead part of the grass means that is the direction of the grain. If the green is sloping in the same direction of the grain, play slightly more slope. If the grain is in the opposite direction of the slope, then play slightly less break.
Save this post now so you can remember this tip next time you’re playing on Bermuda greens.
#PGAgrainreading#BayHillGrainTips#BermudaGreenInsights#ProGolfGrainStrategy
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Hi Joanne. Highlife Rope Access have explained to me why you've raised the strength of the lime in the post - suggesting that it's a proxy for capillary porosity. The NHL classes vary widely in terms of compressive strength, and NHL5 equates to between 5 and 15 MPa after 91 days, while an NHL3.5 can range from 3.5-10, and even an NHL2 (normally the strongest that should be specified for pointing except in very exposed situations with the hardest walling stone) can cover 2-7, and thus could set harder than the weaker end of NHL5. This suggests to me that they can't be that good a proxy for porosity. Also, since the buildup should be moisture-impermeable (non-capillary aggregate like foamed glass, plus a breather membrane), I can't see how the porosity of the slab would impact on performance. On the plus side, even NHL5 retains vapour permeability, which is the key reason for using lime, and lime is much more sustainable than concrete due to reduced embodied energy, carbon reabsorption, and total recyclability.
That win has to come sooner rather than later. Great work overcoming the time penalty too!