The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Golf club fights time and tide with nature

Saltmarsh plants to be transplant­ed to protect fairway

- BY MICHELLE HENDERSON

A world-renowned golf club in the north is relying on nature to hold back the tide so the fairway doesn’t wash away.

The 10th hole of the Royal Dornoch Golf Club’s Struie Course has become susceptibl­e to flooding after a number of gaps began appearing in the saltmarsh habitat.

A project beginning next month aims to transplant hundreds of greenhouse­grown native saltmarsh plants to restore their natural defences and prevent it being washed away.

Neil Hampton, Royal Dornoch’s General Manager, said: “In 2010 we noticed a gap appearing in the saltmarsh affecting the 10th hole. If nothing was done we could have lost the whole fairway.

“We tried a number of methods to break the power of the waves, but when we learned of Dr Maynard’s work we decided it was the best way to tackle this potentiall­y serious issue.

“It’s a natural solution and it involves the local schools and other local people, so it fits well with our commitment to the environmen­t and the community.”

“Solution to this problem in a way that is good for everyone”

The project is being managed by Dr Clare Maynard, a research scientist at St Andrews University and chair of the Marine Alliance for Science and Technology (MASTS) Coastal Forum. Each plant, around 5cm in diameter, will be planted into the sand, supported by bio-rolls filled with coir – a waste product made from husk of coconut shells – to help act as wave breaker.

The club, formed in 1877, is providing £10,000 a year for three years towards the project to help safeguard the 10th fairway.

Dr Maynard said: “Coastal erosion is at its worst at the gap in the protective saltmarsh. There are flooding issues in the winter as well as year-round energy from waves degrading the edge of the course.

“We will fill in the gaps with saltmarsh transplant­s to provide a soft engineerin­g solution to this problem in a way that is good for everyone as it helps the environmen­t and there is no need for an expensive sea wall.

“It’s a long-term process, not a quick fix, and while we cannot stop the sea, we can buy time for the golf course simply by having more naturally robust habitats in front of the course.”

 ??  ?? WATER WAYS: Gaps in the saltmarsh habitat in the Dornoch Firth have left part of Royal Dornoch’s Struie Course vulnerable to flooding
WATER WAYS: Gaps in the saltmarsh habitat in the Dornoch Firth have left part of Royal Dornoch’s Struie Course vulnerable to flooding

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