San Francisco Chronicle

Ballpark crews get creative in efforts to conserve water

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This season, the members of the grounds crew that watches over the lush green playing field where the Giants play tried something new: They cut back on overnight watering.

Then, the ground felt a little bit hard to the World Series champions. Players could be more prone to injury without some give in the grass.

Time to turn the water back on.

All around California, ballparks are trying to come up with ways to conserve water as the state faces a historic drought. Cities and towns and even agricultur­al areas in the farming-rich state have been told to cut back on water. Sports venues are finding it’s taking some creativity and a lot of experiment­ation to find ways to do their part.

“That’s a good thing, it is. It’s a serious drought,” Giants manager Bruce Bochy said of the conservati­on efforts. “It’s tough to not have the proper amount of water on the ballfield. Some of these balls, as hard as they’re hit, it gets dangerous and puts the infielders at risk.”

Keeping the AT&T Park field soft with minimal watering is a tough balance and constant work-in-progress for head groundskee­per Greg Elliott and the Giants’ staff that takes prides in a pristine and playable surface.

Elliott hasn’t watered his lawn at home in three years. The grass at his office, though, requires daily attention to host 81 regular-season home games each year plus possible playoffs. He has spent years developing creative ways of maintainin­g the field while using less water — much less.

“I have the worst lawn in the neighborho­od,” Elliott said recently while sitting in the Giants’ dugout. “That’s my lawn, and I run this lawn.”

Off the field, the Giants are pressure-washing the green seats every other game. Sticky soda spills, gooey nacho cheese or stray garlic fries might be staying put a little longer in the stands these days. Team officials are considerin­g asking fans to clean up their own food and beverage messes.

A couple of hours before first pitch, members of the cleaning crew walk through the stands with spray bottles and hand towels to touch up and wipe down the seats where needed. Later, the videoboard implores: “BE A TEAM PLAYER, HELP THE GIANTS CONSERVE WATER!”

Across the bay, the Coliseum sits 22 feet below sea level and thus requires less water because the field holds the moisture better. The A’s also find ways to cut down water usage by not spraying down the stands as regularly while still keeping the facility sanitary.

“We try not to use any water on the infield dirt while the team’s on the road,” head groundskee­per Clay Wood said. “As a common practice, we try to conserve as much as we can. We have for the last five or six years since we started this drought. We have to find that balance.”

At Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, where the 49ers play, recycled water is used for the plumbing system and to irrigate grass among other things — accounting for about 85 percent of total water usage.

At Petco Park, the Padres say they conserved approximat­ely 288,000 gallons of water during the offseason by not maintainin­g the playing field grass, and they expect similar savings next offseason. The San Diego club shut down the water wall at the home-plate gate and replaced the exterior landscape with drought-tolerant plants and materials, such as decomposed granite.

In Orange County, the Angels are evaluating ways to reduce water.

“It’s a topic of discussion and a big agenda item for us,” said vice president of communicat­ions Tim Mead.

At AT&T Park, Elliott has been preparing for a possible drought, along with his boss, Jorge Costa, and the rest of the grounds crew for years. The Giants spent money on wetting agents that bind to soil particles and keep the ground moist for longer periods.

“You wouldn’t know that they’re doing anything different than they’ve always done,” Giants general manager Bobby Evans said.

Elliott relies on 10 field sensors that feed data to a computeriz­ed program that updates him to determine daily watering decisions before he leaves each night around 11:30. The infield clay is typically left alone, even when the team is away, until touch-ups are necessary on game day.

“If you see us with a hose, it’s probably a good thing,” Elliott said.

Pitcher Matt Cain appreciate­s the planning and execution. Except for that feedback early the grounds staff received about the field being a bit hard, generally, players barely notice any difference­s.

“They’ve been doing it without us having to really notice anything that’s different. That’s impressive,” Cain said. “That’s awesome.”

 ?? Ben Margot / Associated Press ?? Giants lead groundskee­per Greg Elliott (left) and others water the AT&T Park infield before a game against the Dodgers in May.
Ben Margot / Associated Press Giants lead groundskee­per Greg Elliott (left) and others water the AT&T Park infield before a game against the Dodgers in May.

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