Showing posts with label snow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label snow. Show all posts

Friday, 20 December 2013

Machrie Bay Golf Course - A challenging year!

1st Fairway underwater - Dec 2013 (snow on hills in the background)
How the fairway should look!
It seems fitting to be very near the end of the year and Machrie Bay Golf course, part of Dougarie Estate, is in the forefront of our minds again. To say it has been a challenging year would be an understatement, most of the pressure being bourne by David the Greenkeeper. The year started with fire and ended in flood, with most other extreems inbetween!
1st fairway with sea & debris - Dec 2013
It has to be said that throughout the year David has done a tremedous job keeping the greens in fabulous condition despite having no greenkeepers sheds.  And he is currently mopping up after the latest storm which breached the sea wall and flooded the first tee, leaving behing piles of seaweed and debris.  Brodick Golf Course suffered a similar fate.  However visiting golfers should not be put off as we have 7 very varied courses on the island and a driving range.  Golf on Arran website has all the details.
The tearoom opens under new management with views across the fairway to the sea.
The snow melts slowly under blue skies - April 2013
Fortunately, the new shed is now up and running so tools are near to hand and the tearoom has stayed open for the winter, providing hot soup, sandwiches and huge mugs of tea (or even better steaming hot chocolate). After the snow earlier in the year the summer proved to be a scorcher and was a well needed break from the freak weather.
The snow arrived - March 2013
Experience has shown that the greens survive better if the snow is left undisturbed
Currently we have a special offer on for the quiet winter months where you can play a round of golf and get soup and a sandwich (or toatie) at the tearoom for £10.  


Greenkeepers shed burnt down - January 2013



Tuesday, 26 March 2013

Dougarie snowbound

Dougarie under snow
The west side of the Island is under snow and like the rest of Arran and Kintyre has now power.  Also there are no phone lines and the water ran very low, until we managed to get a generator attached to the pump. The snow ploughs didn't reach us until late on Sunday and we were very isolated.
The Boathouse
The national news has done a good job in making everyone aware of what's going on, and the problems on the mainland,,,, however, news trickles in slowly here as we have no means of accessing the information.
Digging out road and sub stations
We can clearly see our own power lines are down and the telephone lines are strewn across the road, encased in ice, the telegraph poles are snapped like matchsticks.
The tractor cleared the drive, watch out for snow falls off the roof!
Fortunately as we have a tractor we were able to clear the drive, so at least when the snow plough arrived we could get onto the road - not that we could really go anywhere, but the Kinloch Hotel was the designated refuge point.
Snow on the beach, snowmen not sand castles!
But there really is too much to do, the electric board need access with very wide diggers onto the hills and that means either taking down walls / fences or trying to find a route round.  Sounds easy, but when everything is covered in 6 - 10 foot of snow, finding a gate way can be a little challenging.
Now, where did that golf ball go?
Needless to say, everyone is frozen and managing as best they can. Convoys of emergency electric board personal are hives of activity, and helicopters keep buzzing by.  I even heard they brought supplies in by boat to Lochranza.
House of Machrie looking fabulous - but not accessible!
Well its strange and challenging times, and we hope everyone else is surviving.
House of Machrie
The weight of the snow has forced doors open.

The drifts are only 3 foot deep here.
No access to the barn
Machrie Farm Cottage - exhausted after walking up to see this!
Pretty - lets hope it just melts away with no damage

Bridge and stepping stones
Clear blue seas and white... snow!
Photographs courtesy of Arran in Focus
( Posted remotely from Lamlash)