Grass-eating sheep sacked by golf club in New Zealand, replaced by mowers


By AGENCY
A golf course in New Zealand will put an end to a 55-year-old legacy of using sheep to trim the fairways. — Pixabay

The Tahuna Golf Club in New Zealand is bringing to an end more than half a century of tradition by getting rid of the flock of sheep that has long kept its fairways trim.

The club, some 120km south of Auckland in the Waikato region, made the decision when faced with a bill of NZ$25,000 (RM65,901) for replacing 125 ewes this year.

Life member Frank Hopper said another consideration was the desire to attract younger members who might not be happy negotiating the sheep dung as they lined up their iron shots.

"There's been a desire from people to play on a fully-groomed course as opposed to playing with sheep on the course," Hopper told the New Zealand Herald.

"The most obvious reason is that there's no animal (faeces) on the course, it's easier to clean your shoes and gear when you come off the course if it's a groomed course."

While New Zealand's 25 million sheep famously far outnumber its human population of around five million, the Tahuna club is not the only golf course in the world with ovine groundskeepers.

Australia's Eastern Sward Golf Club near Melbourne introduced sheep, alpacas, ponies and goats in 2019 as part of an environmental experiment to reduce the use of artificial chemicals in grass management.

The Green Eagle Golf Course in Winsen near Hamburg in Germany, which hosts the European Open on the DP World Tour, also uses sheep to keep the rough down. – Reuters

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
sheep , golf

Next In Living

Meet the stylist who perfected Alysa Liu’s signature 'halo' hairstyle
Hot dog breeds in the US: Dachshunds ride high as French bulldog frenzy cools
How refill stores are changing the way we reduce waste
Slowly, slowly, these snails are returning from near extinction
How two cousins turned a dream into a Michelin-starred restaurant in Spain
A home and school in Nairobi offer street children a better future
Children's museum in US gives families with sensory needs a calm space to play
Airlifting pets and their owners who were trapped by the Middle East crisis
KL Cocktail Week returns for its third year, with events across KL and PJ
Older Ukrainians in Berlin are learning German to rebuild their lives

Others Also Read