When I started lawn bowling in May 2012, I followed the standard advice. If I
could touch both my two index fingers and my two thumbs together at the
same time while encircling the running surface of the bowl, it was not too big
for me. Following this advice I started with a number 4 Vector VS made by
Taylor. (Such bowls are the best value/price delivered in Canada and ordered on-line.)
Now after two years of experience, my own suggestion is different. Nonetheless, there is nothing wrong with this standard advice, if you are just going to
be a social bowler who never tries anything but a draw shot. If, however, there
is the slightest chance that you are going to get hooked on this game and become
serious and competitive, your bowl size should be the one which you can hold firmly
when you are holding the bowl with your hand inverted (thumb towards the
ground) using the grip you will employ for a drive shot. (It is not necessarily comfortably holding the bowl this way; you will feel a strain from the weight of the bowl but you should be able to hold it 15 seconds without falling. The reason for this requirement is
that the drive shot requires a substantial backswing. At the high point in that
backswing you will be holding your bowl in your drive grip with your thumb
underneath the bowl. It is at this point that you are most likely to lose your grip on the
bowl.
I have found that if I use the next smaller size to what I would have chosen using the conventional test (in my case a number 3
instead of a number 4 bowl), my hold on the bowl even during a drive is more
secure. I have never heard this advice
anywhere but that is what works for me!
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Monday, October 28, 2013
Monday, October 21, 2013
The Rules for Using Ground Sheets
I lawn bowl in Canada and the weather is rarely conducive to the most
comfortable bowling. The outdoor season is no more than 6 months, to begin with, and we have a good deal of wet weather as well as rather heavy early morning
dew. Tournament authorities often require ground sheets. Some clubs I have played
at, it seems, always use ground sheets for club play. They have many players
who drop their bowls, so I sympathize with these greenkeepers. In my limited
experience, groundsheets do prevent divots.
Despite their widespread use in Canada, it seems not everybody even among tournament players knows the rules that pertain to groundsheets. Since these rules may benefit beginning novices playing against more seasoned opponents, assertive beginners ought to know them. The conditions of play as issued by the Ontario Lawn Bowls Association make no reference to groundsheets so the relevant rules apply without modification. I quote from the Laws of the Sport of Bowls, Crystal Mark Second Edition. http://www.worldbowlsltd.co.uk/laws/Crystal_Mark_Second_Edition.pdf
1.3.12 Groundsheet: a rectangular piece of canvas or other suitable fabric placed temporarily on the surface of the green to protect it from any damage caused as a result of a player delivering the jack or a bowl. The rear edge of the groundsheet should be placed at least 2 meters from the rear ditch and at least 25 meters from the front ditch (in line with requirements for placing the mat described in laws 19.1.1 and 19.1.5).
19.1.5 If one or more groundsheets are to be used (outdoor play only), the following will apply:
19.1.5.1
The Controlling Body should consult the nominated greenkeeper before deciding where the groundsheets will be placed. The position should be in line with law 1.3.12
19.1.5.2
The Controlling Body can make the decision to use ground sheets either before the start of play or at any time during play.
19.1.5.3
The groundsheets should be securely fastened to the surface of the green using flat-headed pins (or an equivalent) that do not stick up from the surface.
19.1.5.4
The groundsheets should stay in the same position until the end of the game or until the Controlling Body decides they are no longer needed.
19.1.5.5
The mat line should be placed on the rear edge of the groundsheet.
Despite their widespread use in Canada, it seems not everybody even among tournament players knows the rules that pertain to groundsheets. Since these rules may benefit beginning novices playing against more seasoned opponents, assertive beginners ought to know them. The conditions of play as issued by the Ontario Lawn Bowls Association make no reference to groundsheets so the relevant rules apply without modification. I quote from the Laws of the Sport of Bowls, Crystal Mark Second Edition. http://www.worldbowlsltd.co.uk/laws/Crystal_Mark_Second_Edition.pdf
1.3.12 Groundsheet: a rectangular piece of canvas or other suitable fabric placed temporarily on the surface of the green to protect it from any damage caused as a result of a player delivering the jack or a bowl. The rear edge of the groundsheet should be placed at least 2 meters from the rear ditch and at least 25 meters from the front ditch (in line with requirements for placing the mat described in laws 19.1.1 and 19.1.5).
19.1.5 If one or more groundsheets are to be used (outdoor play only), the following will apply:
19.1.5.1
The Controlling Body should consult the nominated greenkeeper before deciding where the groundsheets will be placed. The position should be in line with law 1.3.12
19.1.5.2
The Controlling Body can make the decision to use ground sheets either before the start of play or at any time during play.
19.1.5.3
The groundsheets should be securely fastened to the surface of the green using flat-headed pins (or an equivalent) that do not stick up from the surface.
19.1.5.4
The groundsheets should stay in the same position until the end of the game or until the Controlling Body decides they are no longer needed.
19.1.5.5
The mat line should be placed on the rear edge of the groundsheet.