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MM60 Integral For Leeds Rhinos

MM60 Integral For Leeds Rhinos: Ryan Golding, head groundsman at Leeds Rhino’s and Yorkshire Carnegie’s Emerald Headingley Stadium, believes that Limagrain’s MM60 grass seed has been integral to the success of the pitch.

Ryan has been working at the stadium for fifteen years and has occupied the position of head groundsman for the last four. With two deputy’s underneath him – Dan Connor and Leon Pearson – Ryan and his team tend to the stadium pitch, two first team pitches, four academy pitches, a 3G pitch and the Stanningley rugby league club – where the Rhino’s academy teams play.

MM60 Integral For Leeds Rhinos

“On average with both first teams and academy games we host around 50 – 60 games,” says Ryan. “In addition to that we also have under 19 games, community games, disabled rugby games, and also events. This year when in mid-season the pitch was transformed into a Bollywood film set as a 1930`s hockey pitch. It is a very intense work place and it never stops but it’s interesting, challenging and enjoyable.”

With such a heavy fixture list, renovations largely depend on available windows but Ryan tends to aim for June each year. However, where many groundsmen may have extended periods throughout pre-season, Ryan has as little as 26 days to get the pitch up and running again.

“Getting the right seed is key and that is why I use Limagrain’s MM60,” he says. “We had been with another seed supplier for a number of years but I felt we needed a change to keep on improving. I looked into it and spoke with other groundsmen who use Limagrain and received nothing but excellent feedback.

“As a groundsman I’m very open to what I use and I don’t mind taking a risk but I’ll do my research first. Before I did anything I got some samples of MM60. We trialled it in a tough area in the North East corner which is consistently in the shade and we saw great recovery rates.”

Limagrain’s MM60 grass seed is renowned for producing an excellent playing surface in a stadium environment. It is a 100% Ryegrass formula which is perfect for renovation and divot repair, has a high disease resistance, fantastic aesthetic qualities and offers extremely fast germination – which is boosted by the inclusion of Headstart® GOLD. Developed using the latest scientific findings and field experience, it is a natural revolutionary grass seed treatment that ensures rapid germination and is perfect for enhancing performance on grass seed coatings for sports fields, golf courses, lawns and amenity turf.

MM60 Integral For Leeds Rhinos

“The germination is incredibly fast and I’ve noticed a particular improvement in the centre spot,” says Ryan. “You would not believe the hammering that area gets. A lot of the time you find that kick off’s go straight out which means that there are scrums straight over the centre spot. It was always a problematic area in the past but MM60 has made a noticeable improvement especially when combined with sheets and lighting rigs.

“I’ve also noticed that it doesn’t fray the leaf edge when compared to our previous seed so we tend not to get as much disease – we hardly encounter any leaf spot as a result from stress and there is no yellowing of the leaf either.

“I think my priorities have changed as I’ve got older and wiser. It’s all very well wanting the pitch bright green throughout the year but you are stressing the pitch in doing so and is it really needed for a game that isn’t televised? I’m not so sure. For me, aesthetics isn’t my priority sometimes, it’s all about the recovery and germination and MM60 provides me with this.”

Furthermore, Ryan was quick to praise the customer service he receives from Limagrain.

“Suppliers have to understand the needs of the pitch and the Limagrain team know the standards here which certainly helps – the back-up is great. I can call them whenever I want and we will normally start with a general discussion about rugby before going into the technical side of things. Personally, I think that Limagrain treats each and every customer the same – and that is a fine art if you ask me.”

For further information, please contact Limagrain UK on 01472 371471 or visit the company’s website www.lgseeds.co.uk/amenity

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WOLF-Garten’s 35th Anniversary

WOLF-Garten’s 35th Anniversary: WOLF-Garten will be celebrating 35 years of its multi-change® system in 2018. The system remains the best and most innovative on the market, with the easiest and fastest attachment system available. Using a patented ‘click’ connection and including more than 60 different tool heads and 15 handles of varying lengths, it is bound to cover all the garden tasks you can think of. WOLF-Garten has been working on a number of changes to mark the occasion, including updated packaging and product enhancements.

In celebration of the landmark, WOLF-Garten has updated the design of the tool head attachment, which provides better grip and an optimised spring connection. This updated version fits with the current system, so all new tool heads will continue to be compatible with all handles.

WOLF-Garten's 35th Anniversary

Two new products have also been developed for this anniversary year; a 4-in-1 Leaf Rake and a Gutter Cleaner. Every product within the range now carries an industry leading 35-year guarantee, testament to the quality of the workmanship and evidence of WOLF-Garten’s confidence in its products.

Updated packaging is featured on all products, not just the multi-change® items, and has been designed with a fresh, contemporary style, making it both eye-catching and attractive. The new livery includes task orientated colour-coding on the packaging, meaning choosing right tool for the job has never been easier.

The rebrand continues and extends to WOLF-Garten’s iconic red and yellow logo, which has also had a refresh whilst retaining the distinctive Wolf head consumers are so familiar with.

For further information about all of these products, and other items in the WOLF-Garten range, visit www.wolfgarten-tools.co.uk. You can also find WOLF-Garten on Twitter at @WGGardentools and on Facebook by searching for WOLF-Garten Garden Tools.

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Carlisle United’s True Stars

Carlisle United’s True Stars: Modern life conditions us to celebrate the routine. “Legal and proud,” declares a certain brand of carwash, as though observing the law is exceptional, rather than what you are supposed to do.

The comedian Chris Rock has a routine on this. He uses far too many unprintable words to risk repeating it in full but, in summary, he lampoons a culture in which a certain person boasts that they look after their kids, and ain’t never been to jail. “What do you want, a cookie?” Rock asks.

Mario Balotelli, that renowned moral guide, once explained why he didn’t go wild after scoring goals. “I’m only doing my job. When a postman delivers letters, does he celebrate?”

Okay, extreme example. But the general point holds. We should really save the pride and the praise for the extraordinary, not the everyday.

Preparing a football ground so that it can host a match is well within the standard remit of a groundsman. There are few occasions when he is entitled to high-five his colleagues just because things occur as intended from 3pm.

Last Saturday, though, was different, and if there was any proof needed that the people in charge of Brunton Park’s most important parts are a little above the norm, here it was.

Truly, Carlisle versus Grimsby should have had next to no chance. The Beast from the East had showered pitch, stands and walkways with snow, the same as all those grounds in the country where defeat was admitted.

Pitch inspections were failed, the inevitable accepted and, in the Championship, six games fell. In League One, seven went. In League Two, nine. The layman strolling into Brunton Park, as I did last Friday morning, wouldn’t have given United much hope either.

It was an almost entirely white scene. The terraces, being shovelled and scraped by an admirable team of volunteers and staff, looked particularly treacherous. Even a good distance up into the Pioneer Stand you would not have wished to walk in front of a row of its seating at any sort of pace.

In the middle of all this, pausing to chat without the slightest air of pessimism, was David Mitchell, United’s stadium manager. It is normally Mitchell’s job to anticipate what others cannot, in terms of what nature may bring, but these were extreme conditions – and yet he had nailed it once again.

Don’t worry about the pitch, was the quietly confident suggestion, and with all these people helping around the ground, we’ll have every chance.

This is what makes Mitchell and his team special. It is hardly as if Carlisle got a pardon from the adverse weather engulfing other parts of the UK. Although other clubs also had it very bad – in some cases a fresh heap of snow being dumped on their stadium just as they had cleared the first load – Brunton Park wasn’t exactly spared.

It was, in many respects, an even field. Yet, through covering the pitch long in anticipation of the wintry deluge, and co-ordinating a positive plan of several parts, United were able to unveil just about the only rectangle of green in the county come Saturday morning.

The referee who visited the previous day was satisfied not only by the small portion of grass he saw, but also United’s assurances. The condition of the rest of the ground was acceptable to those in charge of safety and, with the EFL having urged the club to do all it could to get the ground ready in spite of the climate, Carlisle had risen to the challenge.

It is at this point that those lambasting the club for staging a game during uncertain travelling conditions were shooting a little off-target. Carlisle United were some way down the list of organisations whose task it was to pronounce on which roads were safe and which were not, which routes were sensible and which appeared too risky.

Personal judgement could be formed by listening to other key agencies. Some will have chosen not to come and, given conditions in certain places, that is quite understandable. At the same time – and this is not to trivialise the risks of driving in bad weather – one wonders if the fact 143 Grimsby fans made it without serious problem, as well as their team, some local media plus 4,008 United supporters, meant it wasn’t such a reckless call in the end.

Certainly, the person on Twitter comparing the potential journey from north east Lincolnshire to Cumbria to the Munich air disaster should probably reassess that judgement on grounds of taste alone.

Whilst remaining conscious of outside conditions, and communicating appropriately, Carlisle’s actual, physical job was to prepare Brunton Park, if at all possible. This they did against steep odds. And it is this, again, that puts those certain individuals apart.

Following the Blues up and down the land over the years has brought its reasonable share of mishaps. Travelling supporters will hardly need reminding about the surprising frozen pitch at MK Dons (2012, match postponed at 1.45pm), or at Crewe (2008, match postponed an hour before kick-off), or the notoriously unsuitable surface at Crawley (2014, match postponed as team and fans arrived in Sussex).

There are unavoidable cancellations, but there are also scenarios when forward planning has appeared short. It may have seemed incredibly harsh when the Southend groundsman was sacked in January 2017 for failing to protect the pitch against frost before a game against Bolton.

Yet could you imagine such a fate befalling Mitchell and his team (Paul Butler and Matt Henry)? Have they ever been guilty of an MK Dons? The thought is too absurd for words, since their reputation is far higher.

That reputation is long-earned. It means that, when flood water laps onto Carlisle’s surface, there is seldom a sense of panic, because all concerned know the calibre of the men whose task it will be to sort it.

Even when that flood water became Biblical, after Storm Desmond, their work was outstanding. That Brunton Park was only sidelined for three matches before the players returned to a re-turfed pitch was a huge logistical triumph only possible through well-applied skill, judgement and leadership.

Those same qualities we demand from our team, in an ideal world. Yet they are there, routinely, in that corner of the ground between the Waterworks End and Pioneer Stand, where last weekend’s work – which became an immensely positive community effort – was directed.

The Beast from the East was no Desmond, but nor was it the basics; a postman delivering letters. The way it was surmounted reminded you of the class of Mitchell and those in his charge and, with all the talk of contract extensions and improved terms at Brunton Park right now, one wonders if Carlisle’s very best signing since 2005 should not be first in line for a few bob more.

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Snake Maintenance Reduced

Snake Maintenance Reduced: Trimax Mowers has introduced an auto belt tensioning system for the Snake rotary mower, designed to improve performance and cut downtime.

The system ensures that the correct belt tension is always applied during operation, improving the drive to the spindles.

Snake Maintenance Reduced

There’s no risk of fitting the belts in the incorrect configuration due to the design of the idler arm, and no need to keep checking that belts are fitted and tensioned correctly.

Customers are assured this new development will boost productivity and ensure a top-quality cut for which the Snake has become renowned.

Not only is this new system fitted to all new Snake models, it’s also available as a retrofittable kit allowing existing customers to reap the same benefits. Only basic hand tools and a power drill are all that is required to perform this upgrade.

Caroline Shaw, European Marketing Manager at Trimax commented: “We’re very excited to launch this new system for the Snake. It’s a popular machine which is transforming green areas around the world. As with all new innovations, the auto belt tension system underwent rigorous testing – 100,000,000 cycles to be precise!”

For more information, visit: www.trimaxmowers.co.uk

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Rain Bird Award For MJ Abbott

Rain Bird Award For MJ Abbott: MJ Abbott Limited, a golf and sports turf contractor based is Wiltshire, was recognised at Rain Bird’s distributor and contractor awards ceremony held at the Golf Industry Show in San Antonio.

Contracts Director Steve Briggs and Contracts Managers Nathan George and Jim Price were there to accept the ‘Top Flight’ award for exceptional growth on the company’s behalf.

Rain Bird Award For MJ Abbott

The presentation of awards is a celebratory conclusion to Rain Bird’s training and education event for golf contractors and distributors, which takes place at the show each year.

“2017 was a busy year for us,” Nathan George explained. “Many of our golf customers upgraded their central controllers, weather stations and rotors to provide the greatest efficiencies and levels of control. Our construction teams are currently building the brand new course at Royal Norwich where a fully-integrated Rain Bird IC system is being installed. It was great to hear all about global developments at the training event and to receive this award in recognition of our achievements as an Approved Rain Bird Contractor.”

Rain Bird’s Regional Golf Sales Manager for the UK, Ireland, Iceland and Scandinavia, Jimmy Sandison, said: “It was fantastic to see a UK contractor recognised at our annual awards ceremony. MJ Abbott had a superb year working with us to grow their golf business. As a company, we are grateful for their installation expertise, and for the first-class support they continue to provide to Rain Bird system and Global Service Plan users across the country.”

For more information, visit: www.rainbird.eu/golf

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