I’m very conscious that this may not be a popular view on here, but am I the only one that is getting more and more uncomfortable with the amount and nature of tree and scrub clearance that is being done on golf courses?
First, let me explain where I’m coming from.
I grew up playing a heathland course which had started to lose its character as a result of natural and, in some cases, deliberate tree growth. On courses such as that, I’m all for efforts to remove trees to get back to something like what was there before golf came along. It makes for a better course and is also good for a type of ecosystem that is rare in the UK, and that would probably be even more threatened if it hadn’t proved itself to be such great land for golf.
I’ve also no problem with selective tree removal - whether to improve the playability of a particular hole; get more light to the playing surface; or thin out trees that were planted far too close together at some point. I’m absolutely all for getting rid of alien species such as rhododendrons and leylandii that a previous greens committee thought would make the course look nicer.
What concerns me are the examples I’m increasingly seeing on social media of courses removing areas of trees and scrub to make the course “tidier”.
Two recent examples that have finally triggered me to write this, but there have been lots of others.
Little Aston posted this week about how their winter tree work had left areas looking “neat and tidy” (for all i know, the work itself might well fall into one of the categories above, but it’s the idea that tidiness is a good thing that concerns me - it very rarely is for wildlife, and I’m personally not convinced it is for golf either!). And Selby GC (which I don’t know) has tweeted proudly “before and after” pictures of what appears to be hawthorn scrub areas and a hedge that have been cleared out to leave bare ground under a few remaining trees.
With the world facing the linked challenges of a climate change emergency and a biodiversity crisis, I worry that golf is going to find itself increasingly on the wrong side of the environmental argument if it isn’t careful, and I don’t think that will be a good place for it to be.
Writing this, I find it interesting that I’ve assumed this won’t be a popular view on here, with the often enthusiastic support for getting rid of trees. Perhaps I’m right. But with this week’s news that two thirds of people across the world believe there is a climate change emergency, perhaps the Venn diagram of golf course architecture and environmental/rewilding enthusiasts has more overlap than I might think.