DOMO® Golf Grass is the result of a unique production process in which separate artificial turf fibres are combined. This makes DOMO® Golf Grass a quality product that is durable and looks natural. Dynamic, flexible and a perfect touch: the properties for the utmost quality and a guaranteed lifetime.
A golf course is made up of various zones, each of which in turn needs a very specific type of turf.
TURF PRODUCTS
- FOR THE GREEN: DOMO® PARKLAND TST Green
The culmination of a golf hole, where the flagstick and cup are located and where a golfer will "putt out" to end the hole. Greens can vary widely in shape and size, but are most commonly oval or oblong in shape. They can site level with the fairway or be elevated above the fairway. They can be flat, sloped from one side to the other or contoured all around their surface.
- FOR THE TEE: DOMO® PARKLAND TST Tee
Starting off pitch area. Where every hole starts, from which you hit your drive or tee shot. The teeing ground for a particular set of tees is two club lengths in depth. The ball must be teed between the markers that define the teeing ground's width. "Teeing ground" refers to one set of tees. Most courses have at least three sets of tees, some have more than twice that many, and the areas where several sets of tees are grouped together are called "tee boxes." So tee boxes are groups of teeing grounds.
- FOR THE FAIRWAY: DOMO® PARKLAND TST Fairway
Landing area second shot. The fairway is the closely mown area that usually runs in between the tee box and green of a golf hole, and is the target for golfers on all holes other than par-3s (where you take aim at the green).
- FOR THE ROUGH: DOMO® PARKLAND TST Rough
The areas outside of fairways that generally features higher, thicker turf or naturally growing (unkept and unmowed) vegetation.
- FOR THE FRINGE/COLLAR: DOMO® PARKLAND TST Fringe/Collar
A closely mowed area of turf immediately off the putting surface and surrounding the green. Turf in the fringe is higher than that on the green, but is much lower than the rough that would be farther off the green. Players will often still use their putters when their ball has come to rest on the fringe. Sometimes called a collar, but not always accurately. Collar and fringe may be the same thing in many instances, but a collar is not necessarily as closely mowed as a fringe. A collar may refer to a collar of rough, for instance; fringe is always closely mowed.
DOMO® PRO MAT
REFERENCES 2006 “La Bravera” – Alicante, Spain 2006 – Pohorje, Maribor, Slovenia 2006 Provincial domain Puyenbroek – Wachtebeke, Belgium 2006 – Pohorje, Maribor, Slovenia
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