Re: MATCH OFF
Posted: Fri Nov 25, 2016 10:38 pm
Bryn should have announced a signing.
Aye then in the summer they could shyte into a tank and spray it over the grass.Cornerfleg wrote:Maybe getting Rodders and Herbie packed up on curry and syrup of figs might have been useful. 500 well filled poop bags left all over the pitch would have thawed it out big time.
You were lucky only coming from Bangor, add 35 miles worth of freezing fog to the journey and that was my trip, ironically when we got out of freezing fog temp rose from -3 to +3 then I hear match is off.Tighter End wrote:Total clown fest.
Quit work early and rush rush rush, only to arrive at Spanners around 6.10pm to find a small throng of bodies, all wondering why the gates were shut.
6.15pm and eventsec start telling us the match is off..WTF?
Even the slowly dying Irish League Football have pitch inspections three hours before kick-off. How pathetic are Ulster Rugby looking right now?
Totally disgusted with their complete lack of consideration for their own support.
I'll be penning a strongly worded email to them, after some Guinness and Tayto, to calm my Bangor Reserves.
Pishing on it would have worked, heat plus urea to prevent refreezingCockatrice wrote:Frost conditions in Galway, Glasgow and Llanelli must be OK..
I see UR tried to make the pitch playable using the hi tec method of getting staff and security to walk on the pitch to defrost it..
UR is pish! End of conversation.Rooster wrote:Pishing on it would have worked, heat plus urea to prevent refreezingCockatrice wrote:Frost conditions in Galway, Glasgow and Llanelli must be OK..
I see UR tried to make the pitch playable using the hi tec method of getting staff and security to walk on the pitch to defrost it..
https://www.pitchcare.com/magazine/lair ... gspan.html - article from August 2015Rooster wrote:The thing that really beats me is why they didn't apply to put under soil heating in when they were getting the money for the rebuild, now it is expensive to run but when you consider most heating is done during off peak hours and we have a firm who is a sponsor who sells electricity then perhaps it would work out cheaper than the fine for tonight's debacle and the previous ones that have occurred.
It also helps grass growth and keeps pitch in better shape in poor wet weather.
Di we not get a drainage and reseeding job done for this season ?Neill_M wrote:https://www.pitchcare.com/magazine/lair ... gspan.html - article from August 2015Rooster wrote:The thing that really beats me is why they didn't apply to put under soil heating in when they were getting the money for the rebuild, now it is expensive to run but when you consider most heating is done during off peak hours and we have a firm who is a sponsor who sells electricity then perhaps it would work out cheaper than the fine for tonight's debacle and the previous ones that have occurred.
It also helps grass growth and keeps pitch in better shape in poor wet weather.
Various quotes:
As the stadium itself is in the middle of a renovation project, it is hoped funding can be allocated to the pitch in the future. In the meantime, James and his crew look after the pitch the best they can.
"At one end of the pitch, the high stand results in a huge shaded area, which does not help with grass growth in that particular zone. We have also had issues with heavy snowfall and frost in the past, even in this part of the city."
UlsterRugby StandHowever, the team have a remedy for helping with the typical Northern Irish weather and the problems associated with it. "We have frost sheets which are used for both frost and snow, as we can shovel the snow off the sheets without damaging the playing surface."
"We are hoping to enhance the pitch with new drainage, undersoil heating and an irrigation system in the future," confirms James. "This should help with the problems we are currently facing in some areas of the pitch."
The Ulster Rugby staff are hoping for a bigger development of the pitch. "We are working towards a new pitch in the near future, with a new surface, adequate drainage, irrigation and undersoil heating. I think a new pitch would complete the redevelopment project and really make Kingspan an exceptional stadium fit for purpose."
Maybe they took the funding and said they put undersoil heating.. now they have been found out.Rooster wrote:Di we not get a drainage and reseeding job done for this season ?Neill_M wrote:https://www.pitchcare.com/magazine/lair ... gspan.html - article from August 2015Rooster wrote:The thing that really beats me is why they didn't apply to put under soil heating in when they were getting the money for the rebuild, now it is expensive to run but when you consider most heating is done during off peak hours and we have a firm who is a sponsor who sells electricity then perhaps it would work out cheaper than the fine for tonight's debacle and the previous ones that have occurred.
It also helps grass growth and keeps pitch in better shape in poor wet weather.
Various quotes:
As the stadium itself is in the middle of a renovation project, it is hoped funding can be allocated to the pitch in the future. In the meantime, James and his crew look after the pitch the best they can.
"At one end of the pitch, the high stand results in a huge shaded area, which does not help with grass growth in that particular zone. We have also had issues with heavy snowfall and frost in the past, even in this part of the city."
UlsterRugby StandHowever, the team have a remedy for helping with the typical Northern Irish weather and the problems associated with it. "We have frost sheets which are used for both frost and snow, as we can shovel the snow off the sheets without damaging the playing surface."
"We are hoping to enhance the pitch with new drainage, undersoil heating and an irrigation system in the future," confirms James. "This should help with the problems we are currently facing in some areas of the pitch."
The Ulster Rugby staff are hoping for a bigger development of the pitch. "We are working towards a new pitch in the near future, with a new surface, adequate drainage, irrigation and undersoil heating. I think a new pitch would complete the redevelopment project and really make Kingspan an exceptional stadium fit for purpose."
If not it was last season which begs the question why were the heating cables/pipes not installed as well, it's pretty simple and you put the cables/pipes in zones which means that you can heat the poor growth areas and frost areas more than the overall pitch and only heat the entire thing in bad weather.
It's all pretty standard technology now and easily controlled, thermostats working with air temps and ground temps.
If they go to do it now it means another pitch rebuild as it gets buried around 250 mm deep and 250 mm between lines.