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14/09/2025
Playing golf has been a big part of several lives here at Ashridge, until things like hip replacements and families and enthusiasm for gambling forced us to move on with our lives.
It is a tribute to golf course greenkeepers that I had never heard of Dollar Spot Disease, being blissfully unaware of the battle going on right underneath my feet.
When I say I had never heard of it, it’s more accurate to say that I had never recognised it as such. I have seen Dollar Spot in garden lawns plenty of times, assuming it to be a small patch of grass that was dead for no special reason, warranting no investigation – curiosity withers if it is not fed.
I simply took it as a sign that aeration and scarifying were probably overdue, and that is the case for golf courses more than anywhere else: the owners and players want to aerate and scarify as little as possible, all while mowing down around half a centimetre every day or two.
Clarireedia jacksonii is a fungal turf disease that severely affects golf courses and other closely mown, intensely used lawns.