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Saturday, April 30, 2011

St Andrews golf club on brink of admitting female members


St Andrews Golf Club has warned members that it could face prosecution under equality laws for failing to allow women to join.


Severin Carrell, Scotland correspondent
guardian.co.uk, Thursday 28 April 2011 19.17 BST
Article history



One of the largest men-only golf clubs in St Andrews, the spiritual home of golf, is on the brink of allowing women to become full members, abandoning one of the sport's most contentious traditions.

The committee at the St Andrews Golf Club, which is run from a handsome Victorian mansion overlooking the greens and fairways of the fabled Old Course, has written to its 2,000 male members recommending that it admit women to the club. The club, founded in 1843, has warned its members that under the new Equality Act, the club could face prosecution for failing to allow women to join. Keeping the ban would be a "retrograde step" as it would mean women would also have to be barred from its clubhouse as guests.

Its past club captains and trustees had decided that allowing all members, regardless of their gender, to have full access to all its bars and facilities would be "the best way, in their opinion, of safeguarding the long-term wellbeing of St Andrews Golf Club", the members were told.

The proposal was welcomed by women's rights campaigners, who have repeatedly called on the major clubs such as the Royal and Ancient (the R&A), which is the sport's most prestigious and influential club and sets the game's rules, to admit women members.

Agnes Tolmie, chair of the Scottish Women's Convention, said: "This is an absolutely fantastic initiative. We shouldn't have any area of the sporting world where women are excluded. It will send out a message in the area, particularly to the R&A, that it's time they thought again."

The R&A, which has 2,500 members around the world, has resisted calls to admit women as full members.

It provoked criticism from Alex Salmond, Scotland's first minister, and the Labour party when it refused to extend honorary membership to the latest principal of St Andrew's University, Dr Louise Richardson, because she was a woman, in 2009.

But the main women's golfing organisations were much less enthusiastic. Shona Malcolm, chief executive officer of the Ladies Golf Union, which has 3,000 affiliated women-only clubs, said: "We have absolutely no problem with single-gender clubs at all. We're very supportive of single-gender clubs: what it does is allow golfers the freedom to choose what kind of club they want to join."

Sheila Hartley, company secretary of the Scottish Ladies Golfing Association, which has 442 affiliated women-only clubs, said many female golfers had experienced more unfairness and sexism when their previously male-only clubs admitted women as full members.

Hartley said she was comfortable with single-sex clubs: "It appears to be only an issue to the public when it's male-only clubs. There are female-only clubs and that doesn't appear to be an issue."

• This article was amended on 29 April 2011. The original showed a photograph of the Royal & Ancient, not St Andrew's golf club as captioned.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

The gloves are coming off and so are the covers.


In between snowstorms we were able to get the remaining patches of ice off the greens as well as the permeable greens covers. In the picture you can see, from left to right, Don, Terry and Dale rolling up the cover for 10 green. John is out of the picture, probably petting Cheeta the cat and I am of course supervising and taking pictures. In the background is the green with some healthy-looking Penneagle creeping bentgrass. A little birdie tells me that someone is going out on the course today to see if it's ready to open....

Friday, April 15, 2011

Spring...

INSTALLING SPRING...

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Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Something new


The If-Only-They-Would-Use-It Ball Mark Repair Tool
Divot Genie
www.divotgenie.com
Some ideas are just plain simple, and the Divot Genie falls into that category. Golfers love gadgets, especially gadgets they can take out of their pocket and attach to their putters. Why not make that gadget a ball mark repair tool? The Divot Genie magnetically attaches to any putter that allows the golfer to fix ball marks without the need to bend over. For non-carbon steel putters, there's a magnet that can be glued for attachment.

I've seen enough elderly golfers in my day using suction cups on the end of their putter grips to retrieve their balls from the hole to think that maybe this little device might make a difference in the Great Ball Mark War we've been losing for the past century. At a cost of only $19.95, convince your golf professional to stock a display unit in his shop, right next to the register.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

The last one...


This is going to be my last post about snow removal at Woodside this spring, as Mother Nature has promised to take over this weekend. So we will hope that she is true to her word and in the mean time will watch the Masters, and dream about the magnolias and Augusta.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Waterfront Property


This spring some new waterfront property has become available on the golf course. With the rather soft real estate market, the price is actually quite reasonable. Better act quickly as this offer is expected to dry up in the next couple of weeks.