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Polaris Race To Goodwood

Polaris Race To Goodwood: Nowhere else can you get so close to cars and bikes blasting up the Hillclimb track than the Goodwood Festival of Speed. Described as ‘motorsport’s ultimate summer garden party, an intoxicating display of speed and power’, the venue on the Goodwood Estate lets you enjoy unrestricted access to the machines and drivers.  Where better then for Polaris to show the most powerful Ranger side by sides, Sportsman and the sensational RZR Dynamix. Against the beautiful backdrop of English parkland you can see, sit in and admire the latest power machines from Polaris.

The RZR Dynamix Active Suspension is the world’s first and only intelligent suspension system designed for this type of off-road vehicle, continuously adjusting your shock absorbers on the fly. You no longer have to choose between setting your suspension for a comfortable ride or performance because Dynamix adjusts to your driving.

Polaris Race To Goodwood

If you want a seriously fast yet totally versatile side by side the Polaris GENERAL will take you from 0 to 40mph in 3.6 seconds and when it’s time for work the GENERAL offers you the biggest payload of 1100 lbs (498kg). Dual bolstered bucket seats with thin film technology provides a dry ride in wet conditions and for even greater luxury you can choose a model with  adjustable Fox Podium X 2.0 QS3 Shocks, a Polaris Pro-Fit Lock & Ride Sport Roof, rear-view mirror and MTX® Premium sound system with Bluetooth connectivity.

Polaris is celebrating the 20th year of production of the Ranger side by side and the one millionth Ranger has rolled off the production line. The latest in the range, the Polaris Ranger XP 1000, sets new standards with over one hundred user inspired improvements, boasts class leading power (82hp) and torque (61lb-ft) and industry leading towing at over 1100kg.

On display at Goodwood alongside its side by side cousins is the most powerful ATV ever. The new Sportsman XP 1000 delivers an ultimate 90hpw and comes with Electronic Power Steering, a new 3-Mode Throttle Control and industry first Digital Gauge with Bluetooth Connectivity. The Sportsman is packed with new features that need to be seen and tried and on exclusive offer at the Festival of Speed show is £500 worth of free accessories when you book a test ride and purchase a new machine.

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Good To Have David Back

Good To Have David Back: David Withers, who became one of this country’s most successful exports when he rose to the position of President and CEO with Jacobsen after 24 years with the company, has taken on the role of Managing Director of Iseki UK with the task of building a British arm for what is a very well known and respected Japanese brand.

David, for all his high flying career based in the United States, never lost either his love of his real home or contact with his British friends and associates, and being able to reignite with both sees him entering his new challenge with characteristic vigour.

He took time from building his new company infrastructure – and shouting at photocopiers and printers – to chat with Turf Matters.

Good To Have David Back

It must have been pretty full on since the decision to create Iseki (UK) towards the end of last year and your appointment as Managing Director shortly after that.

December and January was a really busy time. We had to find premises, hire people, put a computer system in place and pick up the inventory from Ransomes. It’s a big deal starting something from scratch in a very short space of time, ensuring all the legalities are in place etc, but we’ve been able to do it.

You were obviously very well aware of Iseki as a company, and their products, having worked with them while at Ransomes yourself.

Yes, I knew about the company from my time with Ransomes and Textron and that’s why I’m involved in all honesty and being able to work with a company that I wasn’t in competition with while at Textron.

Did your relationship with Ransomes assisted with the hand-over?

Very much so. The transition from Ransomes to Iseki UK was handled very well by both sides and done in a very friendly and co-operative manner. There are also five people who have transferred from Ransomes to Iseki. Our new premises are literally 400-500 yards away from Ransomes so in terms of transferring inventory it was relatively easy because we were so close.

How many staff do you have at present?

As we speak we have eight full time employees while we have three more who have agreed to join us and three temps. In total we will end up with between a dozen to 15 which should be enough to get us through this year and we’ll probably add some more after that.

Where does Iseki currently sit in what is a fairly crowded market?

It varies with tractors and mowers. We’re probably third or fourth with tractors at the moment and first or second when it comes to cut and collect mowers, which I believe are second to none when they come to build quality and performance.

What ambitions do you have for the company in the short, medium and long terms?

The task we’ve been given by our colleagues in Japan is to double business over a five year period. That’s what we are working towards and I think that it’s eminently doable. As things stand right now, golf is very important to us and local authorities are also very important to us but there is no doubt a lot of opportunity for us with contractors, homes with acreage, the bottom end of the agricultural market, so that is where we will be putting our effort. If I compare us to our colleagues in France, Germany and Spain, their sales are 50-50 on agricultural or turf tyres. For us it is probably 90% turf and 10% agricultural tyres. It’s not that the market doesn’t exist, it’s just that we haven’t focussed on it yet.

We often find we end up not doing the job for which we came into the business – Course Managers end up in front of computer screens rather than cutting greens for example. Are you looking forward to getting back to a more hands on role to the one you had latterly at Jacobsen?

Yes I am and no I’m not is the truth of it. I’ve been doing this for about four months and there are bits which I really love – out there meeting dealers, selling things etc. We’re a small team and if we’re really busy in an afternoon I’m out there picking parts something I’ve not done for many years. But then I find myself having to work a photocopier or a printer and I’m completely out of my comfort zone. It will be nice to get all the infrastructure in place so I can focus more on the business strategy side of things.

With all the experience you have gathered over the years you must be uniquely suited to your new role?

It was because of the experience and training that I picked up at Jacobsen that Iseki approached me and we started to talk about this role. To be honest it would be tough to find someone who has better experience and qualifications, based on the job I’ve done over the last 25 to 30 years.

Did you ever thing about sitting back and enjoying the fruits of your labours?

It probably took two or three months to get around the fact that I wasn’t at Jacobsen any more. I’d been there such a long time and it had been so much a part of my life. I was still waking up in the morning thinking about work but by the time I’d got the summer I was bored. There is only so much golf you can play and it was too early for me. I still feel like I’ve got something to offer. We’ve got the five year plan to double the business and I’ll see how I feel when we’ve achieved that. I’ll be edging towards 60 by then so I’ll see then what I want to do then.

So exciting times ahead?

Very much so. I have to say too that we are working with dealers but we have gaps to fill so there will be opportunities for dealers who are out there and who are interested in becoming an Iseki dealer.

Well, David, we are delighted to see you back in the UK. The industry will be better for having you back involved and we’ll just let you get back to working out how to put toner in your printer.

ISEKI To Sponsor Sam Forgan

ISEKI To Sponsor Sam Forgan: ISEKI UK today announced that it has signed a one-year deal to sponsor local professional golfer Sam Forgan.

Sam, who is based at the well-respected Stowmarket Golf Club in Suffolk, is currently competing on the Euro-Pro tour having narrowly missed out on getting his card for the Challenge Tour last year.

ISEKI To Sponsor Sam Forgan

“Hopefully this sponsorship will give me more opportunities and a better chance of getting on the Challenge Tour this coming year” said Sam, commenting on the recent announcement “Working with ISEKI will also be a great learning experience for me and will give me an understanding of the supply side of the golf industry. I am really looking forward to the experience”

David Withers, Managing Director of ISEKI UK, pictured here with Sam was equally excited about the new relationship. “I had the pleasure of meeting Sam and hearing more about his ambitions for the future and we are delighted to be able to help in this way” said Withers, adding “whilst this is good for Sam it is also good for us, Sam travels all-round the country playing golf and will be promoting our wonderful products everywhere he goes……also hoping he might give me a few pointers to improve my swing!!”

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

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Euroflor To Enthrall At Hever Castle

Euroflor To Enthrall At Hever Castle: Hever Castle Golf Club’s head greenkeeper Rob Peers is a man on a mission: “to encourage visitors to both the golf course and the castle estate to fully enjoy and be fully immersed and engaged with the complete site”.

And he is confident that by using a variety of Rigby Taylor’s Euroflor urban meadow flower seed mixes he will achieve this and, by so doing, ‘integrate’ the golf course with the castle estate and enable and encourage all visitors to Hever – golfers and their partners/guests and, likewise, castle visitors – to be fully aware of everything that the historic site in Kent has to offer.

Euroflor To Enthrall At Hever Castle

Built in the 13th century, Hever Castle was originally a country house which came into the hands of Henry VIII who, in 1539, bestowed it upon Anne of Cleves in 1540 as part of the settlement following the annulment of their marriage. The property has since passed through various ownerships.

“With over 400 acres of golf course and estate, including formal gardens, there’s something here for everyone,” says Rob, “and by using the Euroflor mixes to create colourful and eye-pleasing areas with the wow factor, I can foresee a real crossover of visitors between the different areas of Hever – effectively bridging any ‘gap’ between the golf course and the estate.”

Rob and his eight-strong greenkeeping team devote around 80% of their time managing and maintaining the 27-hole golf course; the remainder is spent on areas of the estate that border the golf course and are outside of the remit of the castle’s gardening team.

After studying at university as a quantity surveyor, Rob joined the golf course team in 1994 as a casual and, he says, “I immediately fell in love with greenkeeping”. Since then he has undertaken a swathe of training courses, including gaining Level 3 in Amenity Horticulture Sports Turf Maintenance, as well as tuition/certification courses for aboriculture and pest control. A year ago he was appointed head greenkeeper, after a spell as deputy head greenkeeper.

While his first year as head of the team has, he says, enabled him to recognise the full potential of the benefits of ‘marrying’ areas of the golf course with the wider estate it has also, he adds, “been an exciting, challenging and at times scary period”.

Rob has an infectious enthusiasm for biodiversity and environmental issues – “on the greens, for example, we are doing more to make the sward as healthy as possible by, for example, increased aeration and using more sand rather than chemicals” – and this embraces measures (including bee hives) to improve the incumbent fauna and flora.

It was while he and the team were clearing certain ‘border’ areas (which led to a natural upsurge in bluebells and wild garlic, for instance), that Rob began having thoughts about the potential use and effectiveness of wildflowers in certain areas; some close by/on golf course areas; others in areas sandwiched between the course and the estate.

“Aside from converting unused, largely overgrown plots into colourful and attractive areas for everyone to enjoy, I also know that a project like this is great for my greenkeeping team. It raises our skill sets, improves our engagement with the site and lifts job satisfaction levels.”

Several areas of the estate have been made ready for the Euroflor mixes and in most cases this has entailed clearance of grass, brambles and weeds or a reduction in lake-side reed beds.

One area with particular focus will be the recently-discovered (by him) remains of a riverside bower (shelter) that was inspired by Anne of Cleves, the fourth wife of Henry VIII. This brick-built construction dates back to the early 1900s. “It was in an area previously masked by long grass, brambles and weeds,” adds Rob, “but I think it will be the perfect showcase for a white-based wildflower mix.”

But why Rigby Taylor and why Euroflor seeds (from Top Green, the largest seed producer in Europe)?

“Each week I meet up with a good friend, a fellow head greenkeeper who, despite operating on a relatively small budget on a nine-hole course, commented that he receives excellent service from Rigby Taylor’s regional sales director, Mike Ring, and he suggested I contact Mike.

“I thought that if Rigby Taylor responded so well to such a customer then as sure as anything the company would pay attention to me! And that has certainly proved the case because I can’t fault Mike’s response, back-up and level of support.”

He continues: “Mike also put me in touch with Howard Wood, Top Green’s Euroflor consultant, and it was after a conversation with Howard – a man with more than 35 years’ landscaping/wildflower experience throughout Europe and Africa – that the project here really gained momentum.

Euroflor To Enthrall At Hever Castle

“Howard offered invaluable advice and recommendations on which Euroflor mixes would sit best in the various locations I had identified in terms of colour and height, as well as texture and form.” The chosen mixes are:

  • Flora Britannica – 26 species including  Black Medick, Viper’s Bugloss and Red Clover – on/near the 8th hole/green;
  • Rainbow annuals – 14 species including English Marigold, Tickseed and China Aster – being used on two areas, including one that links the course and estate;
  • Posy (cut flower mix), comprising 12 species;
  • Sarah Bouquet – 30 species;
  • Peace (white, six to eight species – being used for the Anne of Cleves bower; and
  • Honey – 12 species including Borage, Cosmos and Baby’s Breath – being used on/near the 6th hole/green.

Rob will also be using the Souvenir 100% Red Poppy mix, fittingly in the surrounds for the 11th tee. The poppies will be planted to mimick a clock face at 11.00am (if viewed from above). In addition, the Souvenir mix will also be planted sympathetically at the entrance of the Kent and Sharpshooters Yeomanry Military Museum which is situated within the castle grounds.

Howard also advised Rob on bed preparation, including soil analyses for mineral deficiencies or extreme pH levels before the removal of all vegetation then the application of a glyphosate-based weed killer or hand weeding.

That said, Rob will also be using Rigby Taylor’s latest FloraFleece biodegradable matting for some planting. This weed suppressant and support for Euroflor sowing is a recycled fabric composed of 50% jute, 25% cotton and 25% brown wool, with a hessian scrim. Laying this effectively eliminates the need to ‘clear’ an area of weed.

“Howard and I got together and discussed every plot, in some cases viewing it from afar to judge whether the chosen colours and heights would potentially have the desired impact,” says Rob. “Leaning on Howard’s expertise, I’m sure I’ve chosen correctly and now it’s simply a matter of time before we find out!”

For more information, visit: www.rigbytaylor.com

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Makita’s Powered Wheelbarrow Leads To Medals

Makita’s Powered Wheelbarrow Leads To Medals: The Makita 18v LXT Brushless power-assisted wheelbarrow has taken some of the back-breaking labour out of Landform Consultants inspirational garden builds at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2018.

Mark Gregory, managing director of award winning Landform Consultants Limited, together with his talented team, designed The Welcome to Yorkshire Garden in Main Avenue.  It was justifiably awarded the Gold & Best Construction medals as well as winning the People’s Choice Award.  Landform also designed and constructed The Seedlip Garden in the Space to Grow area of the Show which was awarded a cosseted Gold medal.

Makita's Powered Wheelbarrow Leads To Medals

“Chelsea garden show builds are always an enjoyable challenge and we take them extremely seriously so any help from Makita is very welcome,” says Mark Gregory, now a twentyone-time Gold medal winner.  “This labour-saving powered wheelbarrow has helped to reduce much of the pushing of a fully laden wheelbarrow.  This is a very impressive piece of kit and a fine match for the greatest flower show anywhere in the world.”

Designed principally to reduce the physical demands in the construction industry the new Makita DCU180Z is proving popular in many operating fields including commercial gardens.  Capable of carrying 130kg of blocks on the tubular frame, or similar amount of ballast in the barrow bin option, this power-assisted wheelbarrow has the Brushless motor integrated into the front wheel to ensure the maximum possible traction to the heavily ribbed agri-tyre.  This barrow has two forward speeds: Hi up to 3.5 km/h, Lo 1.5 km/h; powered reverse of 1.0 km/h and will climb a 12° maximum incline.  Main braking is provided by the front disc brake controlled by the hand lever on the steering handles. The wheelbarrow weighs just 32.5kg, is ready to work with handles that can be adjusted to three height levels for operator comfort and also fold for easy storage.  The detachable rear trailing wheels with kick down brake can be adjusted from a width of 480mm to 760mm which further improves stability and reduces operator effort.

The Welcome to Yorkshire Garden, sponsored by Welcome to Yorkshire, is inspired by the picturesque Yorkshire Dales, world famous for its dry stone walls, buttercup meadows, wild woodland, tumbling becks and artisan Wensleydale cheeses.  The Landform team made cheese in the stone dairy during the show and served it in the traditional Yorkshire way – on fruit bread.  “This is a celebration of Yorkshire’s stunning scenery and it is hoped that the garden will inspire visitors to experience Yorkshire’s captivating and serene beauty first hand,” continues Mark.  “And we are proud to have been awarded Best Construction too.  After breakdown everything in the garden will either go to charity, be recycled or reinstated, and even taken back to Yorkshire.”

The Seedlip Garden, designed by Landform’s senior designer Dr Catherine Macdonald, is sponsored by Seedlip, the world’s first distilled non-alcoholic spirit.  Inspired by the humble pea the garden was a first for Chelsea Flower Show as all the plants were from just one family – the pea family. “It’s a wonderful feeling to be awarded Gold for something I thoroughly love doing, and it’s even more special when you think the design is centred around the humble pea,” comments Catherine.

Compatible with any of the Makita 18v LXT Lithium-Ion batteries used to power Britain’s number 1 professional power tool range, the new Makita DCU180Z power-assisted wheelbarrow has soft start to ease the load away; constant speed control; twin LED driving lights and locking brake lever for maximum site safety.  For site security an individual ignition lock key is provided.  Previous walk-behind powered site platforms can cost several thousand pounds but the new Makita powered wheelbarrow will prove particularly attractive in relation to price competitiveness and rugged performance.

The DCU180Z is a body only machine which is available with a choice of optional accessories which can include the pipe frame set or bucket frame option.

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