Autumn Workday

A huge collaborative success

On Sunday, September 19, BLBC volunteers showed up for our second semiannual greens maintenance workday.  The aeration (tining), seeding, and sanding is critical for maintaining our healthy and gorgeous green, widely acknowledged as the crown jewel of PIMD’s natural bowling surfaces. 

The weather was ideal: clear skies, modest temperature, low humidity, and a gentle cooling breeze.   Twenty members (including our 4-person greenkeeping crew) and Jose (our professional) worked together in perfect harmony.

The work consisted of three phases. Phase 1 started just after 8 AM, as four workers followed Jose’s tining vehicle to sweep up the extracted turf plugs and scoop them into wheelbarrows.  Two other workers replaced the full wheelbarrows with empty ones before wheeling the plugs off the green.  The coordination was extraordinary as the sweepers never had to wait for an available wheelbarrow.  After 90 minutes or so, a huge, motorized gas-powered blower was used to remove the stray plugs and excessive dirt, after which Jose spread calcium sulfate (aka gypsum) over the green to break up the compaction of dense clay soil.  

After a very brief break, phase 2 began.  One group of workers stood in the sandbox and shoveled sand into buckets. A second group transported full buckets to the green so that a third group could dump the sand into Jose’s mechanical spreader as it travelled slowly across the green.  A fourth group carried the empty buckets back to the sandbox to be refilled and the process repeated itself until the entire green was covered in sand.  Once again, the coordination was perfect as the sand spreader remained in constant motion.

In the final phase, Jose dragged a metal mesh with his tractor to distribute the sand evenly on the green while a few volunteers swept sand into the corners.  

The entire workday effort was completed in just under five hours, allegedly the fastest in BLBC recorded history.  

A hearty shout out to our volunteers (listed in random order):

Douglas Frey, Mike O’Leary, Annie Brillhart, Ben Carson, Stephanie Upp, Chris Davis, Phil Watson, Rolly Coe, Thomas Birt, Phillip Andrews, Gary Samonsky, Cindy Moss, Leslie Engler, Cathy Dinnean, and Mo Shooer.

Daniel Gorelick is UK bound

Our Daniel Gorelick will bowl with Calvin Darling to represent PIMD in the Men’s Pairs competition at the US National Championships to be held at the Laguna Beach LBC in October.  Consider that a warm up as Daniel and his teammate Bill Brault (SWD) just won the US PBA Men’s Pairs Qualifying Tournament held at Cambria this weekend. So Daniel will be making the trip to England in January to compete in the World Indoor Bowls Championship at Potters Resort in England.

Scottie Marzonie posted a video of Daniel’s and Bil’sl championship game on Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/watch/live/?ref=watch_permalink&v=758955693514635

Go Daniel go!

Incidentally, Daniel was also in the championship game playing Loren Dion for the singles qualifying spot for the UK Open. Meanwhile, SFLBC’S Calvin Darling, also a dual member at BLBC, won the Singles Qualifying Tournament for the World Indoor Bowls Championships. These guys are getting the job done – respect.

2025 Aussie Pairs Tournament

For the third Saturday in a row, BLBC bowlers gathered for an intra-club tournament. In this case, it was the Aussie Pairs match-up, which quickly filled to capacity with 28 bowlers. Bowling started promptly at 9 a.m. on greens that had been well prepared by our hard-working greenskeeping team. For this tournament, there were no handicaps and a random draw to establish opponents and rink assignments.

Bowling proceeded at a brisk pace during the morning with some very competitive games. After the completion of round two, there were only two teams standing with a 2–0 record – Andrew Keeler playing with Michael O’Leary and Ethan Bortman playing with Art Kotoulas. Not far behind with a record of one win and one tie were the teams of Phil Grattan and Philip Andrews as well as Lesle Engler and Ben Corson. So, these were the teams to watch going into round three.

In the third round, Ethan and Art faced Cris Benton and Glenn Nunez. It was a close game in the beginning, but Cris and Glenn slowly pulled away in a tightly bowled game with many good shots. Meanwhile, Andrew and Mike were playing Janice Bell and Sarah Allday. They had to work to win this one, but they eked out a 11–8 win and with that accomplished, they won the tournament. Phil and Philip came in second in the tournament, followed by Leslie and Ben, and then Jim Corr and Mark Hanusin.

Kudos to the groundskeeping team for their extra efforts preparing the green. As always, the hospitality team did a great job, providing refreshments and keeping the clubhouse in good order.

For those interested in detailed results here are the games scores and standings (click to enlarge):

Final standings:

2025 Vet-Novice Tournament

It was another lovely day in Berkeley, with the green trimmed and true for a friendly Vet–Novice Pairs tournament designed to welcome newer bowlers into the club’s lively mix of annual competitions. Ten novices teamed with one of ten veterans in a random draw, no handicaps and no strength-vs-strength match — just three 12-end pairs games starting at 9:00 a.m. with plenty of good-natured mentoring along the way. The format kept things simple and spirited: win what can be won, learn what can be learned, and enjoy the rhythm of bowls on a well-prepared surface. I will pause here to thank the Greenskeepers, Tournament Committee, and Hospitality Committee for their considerable efforts in support of the tournament. The club as we know it would not exist without our volunteers.

By lunch, two games were in the books and three teams held a perfect 2–0 record. Cindy Moss and Steve Arvin set the pace with an imposing +20 differential, closely followed by Art Kotoulas and Stephanie Upp at +11 differential, while Cris Benton and Mark Hanusin rode two come-from-behind wins to +5 differential. Fortune added drama: the draw had Cindy/Steve and Art/Stephanie playing against each other in the third round, making a 3–0 finish likely for one of them. Cris and Mark could still reach 3–0 against Russ Leonard and Ben Steinberg, but the differential gap loomed like a small mountain.

As the last round unfolded, the Cindy/Steve vs. Art/Stephanie game tightened end by end until it finished as a 10-10 draw, denying both Cindy/Steve and Art/Stephanie the 3-0 record that seemed inevitable for one of them at noon. On the adjacent rink, Cris and Mark were six down with four ends to play. Buoyed by the tie emerging next door they chiseled away to trail by two entering the final end against Russ and Ben. It was a long jack; after the leads had bowled Russ and Ben held two, while Cris and Mark had a nice collection of back bowls, shaping a chance. Two of Cris’s deliveries added more back bowls, a third went hunting for the jack and missed leaving one bowl left to change the day.

That last shot was a yard-on shot down the wide side to nudge the jack gently four feet back into the waiting pocket of six back bowls. Russ and Ben had one chance to answer involving a tight line to a displaced jack, but the bid didn’t land. With their last bowl, Cris and Mark turned a deficit into the count they needed, sealing the win on the day. A fitting finish for a Vet–Novice tournament: mentorship, nerve, and one decisive bowl at the end.