Improvements edge Beaconsfield into England’s Top 100

Improvements edge Beaconsfield into England’s Top 100: Over 100 years old, Beaconsfield Golf Club is a private members club boasting an 18-hole, parkland and tree lined course in south Buckinghamshire.

At 680 members, the club is in the enviable position of being full and only accepting applications now from lady and junior golfers.

Improvements edge Beaconsfield into England’s Top 100

Improvements edge Beaconsfield into England’s Top 100

It all began in 1913 when local landowner, Colonel Du Pre, set out to fulfil his dream of establishing a prestigious eighteen hole golf course and clubhouse on his Wilton Estate. He asked famous golf course architect H.S. (Harry) Colt to design it. Colt was referred to as “the best golf architect of all time” and by 1913 he had already designed some twenty courses, including The Eden at St Andrews. He went on to design over three hundred other courses in some sixteen countries including Wentworth, Moor Park and the New Sunningdale course.

Amazingly the club has its own railway station! This came as a result of negotiations between the Colonel and those railway companies building the London to Birmingham railway. The line went through Beaconsfield, cutting right through the Wilton Park estate, so the Colonel orchestrated a covenant whereby they were required to build a “Halt” adjacent to “a Golf House” that he had in mind to build. That Halt (now “Seer Green and Jordans” station) was duly built and opened in 1915, just one year after the “Golf House” and the new course had been opened!

The club has boasted some star members over the years, including world number one Luke Donald. Luke was Club Champion while still a junior member of the Club and went on to win numerous national and international tournaments. He went to the top of the world rankings in May 2011 after winning the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth. In 2012 he became the first player ever, affiliated to both the US and European tours, to head the money list for the year on both tours.

Course Manager, Stuart Langhorn, relishes the challenge of improving the 222 acres of land in which the course sits, boasting a solid number of traditional English trees including oak, beech, ash and birch. He says that people are allowed to donate trees but he’s very strict about maintaining that English heritage!

Originally from Cumbria, Stuart took full advantage of an opportunity to work much further south at the All England Club, Wimbledon, as an intern for 6 months in 1999. He was able to put into practice some of the foundations of ground care and also enjoy the venue, being on court to watch Pete Sampras win.

He then spent six years at Woburn as a fulltime machine operator, covering seven European tour events before moving on to Burhill Golf & Leisure as Deputy Course Manager for Alwickbury Park in Harpenden. After seven years and a promotion to Course Manager, Stuart was ready for the new challenge of Beaconsfield in 2013.

Stuart says “The situation at Beaconsfield is rather unique with a 4-year waiting list and full membership. I’m not surprised because the course is well laid out, it’s traditional and also family oriented. We’re always looking at ways to further improve the course and surrounding grounds, embracing new techniques and technology where possible.”

Improvements edge Beaconsfield into England’s Top 100

Improvements edge Beaconsfield into England’s Top 100

“One success story on that front has been the purchase of a Ventrac tractor in the last couple of years. I first saw the Ventrac at BTME and was immediately drawn to investigate further because it was so different to any other machine I’d ever used.”

“We have about six areas on the course that we’ve always cut with fly mowers and strimmers because they are really sloping, uneven and rough! I wanted to see how the Ventrac would handle those areas and whether it could give us any time saving. In reality we were blown away during the demonstration at how easily and efficiently the machine handled the work.”

“It would have been an easy decision for me to bring the machine into Beaconsfield on that basis alone but I had to make more of a business case in addition to the huge time saving. That came with the sheer versatility of the Ventrac because of all the other attachments available. It could not only replace several other machines we were using but could be used throughout the winter too for a whole range of groundcare needs from drainage to stump grinding.”

“It was still a surprise when we had our own machine on site in May 2018 to see exactly what it could do for us. It’s taken literally 75% of the work away from those rough areas in one go! The guys who use the machine are genuinely excited about what it can deliver and the guys who don’t use it are very happy that it’s cut down on the many afternoons they’ve spent fly mowing in these areas.”

“The Ventrac has replaced our first-cut mowers as well as our semi-mowers. When we stop cutting the grass, we take the contour deck off and put the tough cut on and get into the woodland. Once we clear it out we need to maintain it and the tough cut deck is ideal. It just goes in and eats everything up!”

“When the woodland work is done we fit the trencher attachment and it goes straight out draining fairways. 12 months a year work!”

“On top of that, we have so much more space in our sheds now because we just have the one machine with its attachments rather than a whole load of machines. We’ve also saved money on buying or hiring in other machines we previously needed for our woodland areas and for drainage.”

Improvements edge Beaconsfield into England’s Top 100

Improvements edge Beaconsfield into England’s Top 100

“It’s still surprising us too. We keep testing it on steeper or more difficult areas thinking it’s going to slip up, but it never does! It’s only limited by the confidence of the team – and its official limits of course!”

“Members have noticed a huge difference because we’re now taking areas that were unmaintained – long, deep and rough – and we’re taking them down to one-inch grass. There isn’t a person in the club who isn’t happy!”

“The Ventrac has moved the whole course from 9 out of 10 to 10 out of 10, and we’ve moved into the Top 100 Golf Courses in England. This is partly because of what it can do and partly because the guys have more time to focus on keeping the rest of the course better maintained. They are cutting greens, tees, dry cut tees, fairways and approaches more and also being able to do more attention-to-detail work.”

“Rupert Price at Priceturfcare was really helpful when we were considering the machine and we’ve been delighted with the service we’ve had from the dealer, RT Machinery. Tom Bailey and the team there were fantastic through the demo and purchase and then the backup has been superb. Whenever we’ve needed parts or information it’s always been with us that day or the day after.”

“We had an issue with the machine coming into the Bank Holiday weekend last August and they even delivered on that, picking it up on Friday and returning it on the Tuesday, all fixed. It’s great dealing with a company that are not trying to sell all the time.”

“Having said that, we are already planning which attachments we want to get next for the Ventrac – certainly the blower and large brush, which will add to the versatility we have. We know that other owners have used their brush for de-mossing car parks, clearing pine cones, shifting snow and more.”

“The whole machine just absolutely blows everything away in its market. There’s nothing else like it!”

For anyone interested in exploring what the Ventrac can do, please contact RT Machinery on 01844 299037 or visit the website www.rtmachinery.co.uk.

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The growing role of PGR’s

The growing role of PGR’s: Plant Growth Regulators (PGR’s) are a longstanding programme component for those maintaining all types of amenity grassland and managed amenity turf.

Clipless NT® from Headland Amenity’s is a Trinexapac-ethyl PGR, which is typically applied from mid-April on outfield or course turf and mid-late May on fine turf. Alex Hawkes, Headland’s Sports Turf Manager explores how PGR’s work and how many are now finding additional benefits of their use.

The growing role of PGR’s

The growing role of PGR’s

PGR’s effectively block the production of gibberellic acid – the plant hormone responsible for cell elongation. By lowering levels of the hormone within the plant leaf, PGR’s reduce cell elongation and vertical growth and, instead, redirect the energy within the plant to generate enhanced root development and lateral growth. In its simplest capacity, it can contribute towards a sward that requires less frequent mowing, saving manpower and associated machinery costs. They can be particularly useful for reducing mowing in difficult or dangerous areas such as steep banks.

Because growth is redirected from vertical to horizontal, PGR’s are often employed by greenkeepers and groundsmen alike to increase the density of a given area. Moreover, they have also been shown to optimise the conditions for seeding operations – particularly those in or near competitive swards. With the regulated growth and lower energy consumption of the existing plant, nutrition from the soil profile is optimised for germination and establishment of the new seedling.

At Trent College in Nottingham, Head of Gardens and Grounds Peter Flewitt trialled Clipless NT® in this capacity, on the schools four cricket squares. “In our environment, we are able to renovate the squares much earlier in the growing season than perhaps other local clubs or the county grounds would. We applied Clipless NT® at the end of July, a week before we started our renovations and we nicknamed this area our ‘old grass’. We were interested to see if by regulating the growth here, the new seed sown in the vicinity would germinate better due to lower competition – and it worked well.”

Peter continues, “We left the ‘new grass’ to grow through and the difference in their comparative growth speeds was evident – particularly when we mowed for the first time that it was just this new grass being cut. With the Clipless NT®, used in conjunction with H-Cote™ (slow-release fertiliser) we were able to then manage and sustain the healthy, dense sward we achieved in our renovations through the autumn and winter period when our workload shifts focus onto our winter sports areas. With the wet winter we had, the Clipless NT® application kept growth in check meaning we didn’t have to take any mowing equipment out onto the soft ground at any stage.”

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How to help rainfall rescue project

How to help rainfall rescue project: If you’ve some time on your hands, here’s a UK rainfall project that’s caught our eye at Rain Bird Golf.

The weather is always a topic of conversation for Brits.  Can you, your staff or family members take part in the Rainfall Rescue project and add to our UK rainfall know-how?

How to help rainfall rescue project

How to help rainfall rescue project

The UK has rainfall records dating back 200 years or so, but the vast majority of these are in handwritten form and can’t easily be used to analyse past periods of flooding and drought. Professor Ed Hawkins is a Reading University scientist who has run a number of “weather rescue” projects but this is the biggest yet.

The Rainfall Rescue Project is seeking volunteers to transfer hand-written data to online spreadsheets.

The project is looking to fill the yawning gap in UK digital rain gauge records between the 1820s and 1950s.

Each of the 65,000 scanned sheets contains monthly rainfall totals for a particular decade at a particular station, approximately three to five million data points in all. If Prof Hawkins’ team can convert this information to a digital format, it could lead to a much better understanding of the frequency and scale of big droughts and floods. And, that will assist with planning for future flood and water-resource infrastructure.

For example, many across the country had a sodden start to the year because of heavy rainfall. Meteorologists suspect October 1903 was just as bad, if not worse, but unfortunately, because all the rainfall data from that time was hand-written, it’s not possible to analyse this data. Likewise, there were some very dry springs and winters in the 1880s and 1890s. Britain had six or seven very dry winters and springs on the trot. If that happened today, it would probably cause serious problems for water companies because they rely on wet winters and wet springs to recharge reservoirs.

Prof Ed Hawkins explains, “Water companies have to plan for a one-in-100 or one-in-500-year drought but we’ve only got 60 years of very dense digital data, and so it’s very hard for them to come up with reliable estimates. We know there are periods in the past that, if they happened again, would probably break the system. The same is true for very heavy rainfall and floods.

You’re not required to rummage through old bound volumes; the Met Office has already scanned the necessary documents – all 65,000 sheets. You simply have to visit a website, read the scribbled rainfall amounts and enter the numbers into a series of boxes. If you do just a couple of minutes every now and then – that’s great,” said Prof Ed Hawkins. “If you want to spend an hour doing 30 or 40 columns – then that’ll be amazing. But any amount of time, it will all add up and be a tremendous help.”

This can literally take 5 minutes – why not use your tea-break?
Take part in the Rainfall Rescue project here.

If you choose a particular year to work on, why that year? Is it the year your golf course opened or the year you held your most memorable tournament? Share your story on Twitter with #rainfallrescueUK. Tag@rainbirdgolfuk and we’ll share your story too!

Jimmy Sandison – Regional Golf Sales Manager – UK, Ireland, Iceland and Scandinavia

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Later Wimbledon a no go

Later Wimbledon a no go: Wimbledon head groundsman Neil Stubley says “it’s not possible” to host The Championships later in the summer or in autumn as the daily window for play would be too short.

Wimbledon last week became the highest-profile tennis tournament to be cancelled due to the coronavirus with the All England Lawn Tennis Club confirming the 134th Championships will now be staged from 28 June to 11 July 2021.

Later Wimbledon a no go

Later Wimbledon a no go

There was initially talk that Wimbledon could be rescheduled to later in the year, but Stubley says it wasn’t really an option.

“In late summer the sun gets lower in the sky,” he told The Telegraph. “Then the dew point on the grass arrives earlier, and the courts get slippery. The window for play becomes shorter at both ends. As much as it would be lovely to be able to play in late summer and autumn, it’s not possible.

“It’s true that we have staged Davis Cup matches in September. But play would start at 11.30am or noon and finish by 5pm. Whereas, at The Championships, you’re going from 11am until 9pm every day. To get through 670 matches over 13 days is a challenge in the height of summer, let alone at other times of the year.”

Stubley admits he will miss the “adrenalin rush” he gets on the first day of Wimbledon.

“One of the beauties about my job is that I get to showcase my work to the world every year,” he said. “When the eyes of the world are looking to how Centre Court is for that first day of The Championships, it’s always a nervous moment. It will be a funny feeling, through June and July, not to have that adrenalin rush.”

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