ice hockey is a rink and field hockey is just a field
If you mean in the context of "the field" or "the court" for other sports, then "the ice" would be the proper name for the playing surface in ice hockey. ^^^^ In other words, the rink.
The modern game of field hockey (which is commonly played on an artificial turf) originated in England.
Ice hockey is played on ice, while field hockey is played on a grass surface, the rules in field hockey are kinder than ice hockey, and the sticks vary between versions.
Artificial turf was first invented in the early 1960s by an RTP research team headed by David Chaney. It was first used for field hockey in the 1970s.
The Packers home field is not on artificial turf. They play on a natural grass surface.
In german field hockey is referred to simply as Hockey (with a capital H as it is a noun) Hope that helps.
Ice Hockey is Hockey played on ice; as compared to Field Hockey which is played on grass.
No it can be played anywhere but the ground she be flat and the grass should be very short.
Hockey turfs have a carpet-like surface. By wetting the fields there is less chance of carpet burns or nasty scrapes occurring when skin scrapes the surface (such as when a player falls or scrapes knuckles).
There are three surfaces are used in field hockey: 1. Mud surface. 2. Grassy groun. 3. Afterterf (santhetic)
Field hockey played on a grass turf is very common in most countries otherwise involved in field hockey, in areas which do not have easy access to an artificial turf or simply wish their players to play on a grass field for some reason (it is cheaper to maintain and players with major experience on grass often have better coordination and skills than those who play on artificial or other fields).