The Province

Have a ball in your own backyard

Personal bocce ball courts are rising in popularity thanks to the game’s accessibil­ity

- MELISSA KOSSLER DUTTON

John Paul Vyborny and his family discovered bocce ball while vacationin­g in the Bahamas many years ago.

When they returned home, they looked for bocce courts near their house in Tucson, Ariz. They located some near relatives in Michigan and at a favourite restaurant in California, but nothing convenient to home.

So after recently moving into a house with a large backyard, Vyborny and his wife Anna, now empty nesters, decided to install their own bocce court for entertaini­ng friends and family. He developed the plans and found a contractor to help build it.

“It’s a really nice social activity,” he said. “It’s interactiv­e. It’s very easy to play.”

Landscaper Greg Rowland says he has seen a steady increase in customers asking for bocce courts.

“I have installed them from one end of Phoenix to the other. In the last six months, I’ve done more residentia­l courts than in the last year and half,” said the owner of Grow Land landscapin­g firm. “A four-yearold and an 84-year-old can play this game. It’s a great intergener­ational activity.”

Bocce involves two teams and nine balls. One player throws a small ball, called a pallino, down the court. Players then alternate tossing the other eight balls, which are about the size of a softball, trying to get as close as possible to the smaller ball. The person who throws the closest ball and his or her teammates whose balls are closer than their opponents earn points. The game, a popular pastime in Italy, has roots in ancient Egypt and the Roman Empire.

Bocce is catching on rapidly in this country, said Mario Pagnoni, author of The Joy of Bocce. “It is a wonderful game full of skill and strategy, one that requires finesse at times,” he said.

He noted that bocce courts are being added “in parks, retirement homes, condo complexes and in schools across the country.”

The game’s appearance in public spaces, including restaurant­s and bars, has driven interest among do-it-yourselfer­s, said Felicia Feaster, managing editor at HGTV. Building a bocce court is “harder than a corn hole game, but easier than a backyard bowling alley,” she said.

Numerous websites offer tutorials. Courts must be constructe­d on a level area and require three layers of material — usually a combinatio­n of rocks and a top coat made of crushed oyster shells, tennis court clay, sand, crushed stone or turf. Courts often have a drainage system and some sort of perimeter.

Tom McNutt, owner of Boccemon, a company that sells the crushed-oyster surface material, typically recommends building bocce courts about 10 by 60 feet. A do-it-yourself court can cost anywhere from US$7 a square foot to twice that depending on materials and how much site preparatio­n is required, he said. He offers constructi­on plans on his website boccemon.com. Landscaper­s and other profession­al installers can charge up to $25 a square foot, he said.

Missy Henriksen, a spokeswoma­n for the National Associatio­n of Landscape Profession­als, says landscaper­s can incorporat­e everything from plants and benches to custom scoreboard­s and specialty lighting into the designs.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Residentia­l bocce ball courts, like this one in Tuscon, Ariz., are popping up across the United States as well as in parks, condo complexes and schools.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Residentia­l bocce ball courts, like this one in Tuscon, Ariz., are popping up across the United States as well as in parks, condo complexes and schools.

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