Posts Tagged Donnington Grove
Donnington Grove Course Guides
As a recent addition to our website we have added an area where golfers can view our course guide.
The area is designed so that Golfers can see all the hole plans and information such as distance and par before they play on the course. The plan also includes several top tips for each hole to help you with your game. The course guides include a bird’s eye plan of the hole and its layout, as well as a photo of the course from the tee looking towards the flag. Golfers should be able to use this to plan their shots as well as seeing where they have gone wrong in the past.
Donnington Grove is also offering businesses the chance to sponsor one of its 18 holes. Donnington Grove Country club has one of the best courses in the area; a historic hotel; a great clubhouse, with a friendly environment; and really good practice facilities. Theses, together with its thriving membership, make it one of the busiest corporate and society gold venues in the area attracting over 15,000 visitors each year.
We would like to offer you the opportunity to promote your company to this wider market by inviting you to join the Donnington Grove Business Executive Club. This will entitle your company to 8, 12 or 16 rounds of golf each month, A full colour advertisement on each golf buggy’s GPS system, a hyperlink to your website from ours and discounts on buggy hire, corporate golf days, hotel accommodation, functions & conferences.
If you would like to know more information about how to sponsor one of our holes then please click here. Alternatively you can contact Dave Alan by email or by phone on 01635 581000
Top Golf Tips – Backspin
In order to play a great game any golfer needs to think about the shot ahead. In order to play one step ahead you need to command a great deal of command over the ball, in many situations this means applying backspin to your shot. The principle of backspin is to cause the back of the ball to mover at a higher rate than the front restricting the balls momentum when it lands. This is prevent the ball from rolling forwards when it hits the green or the fairway.
How to apply Backspin
the grooves incorporated on the club face are what you need to focus on to apply backspin. As the face makes contact with the ball, the grooves grip is, pulling it backwards and therby imparting the spin. For optimum performance from both the ball and the club, it goes without saying the both should be wiped prior to taking the stroke in order to remove any soil or sand an ensure clean contact.
Discounted Chauffeur Services for Members
We have agreed with Gin & Tonic, located in Newbury, for a discount on chauffeur driven cars for our members. So, for example, if you heading for the sun and need to be driven to an airport, Gin & Tonic can provide you with a “Meet & Greet” service and transport you in the comfort of one of their fleet of Mercedes Benz cars.
Here are their prices for their most popular transfers:
To London Heathrow £69 From London Heathrow £74
To London Gatwick £105 From London Gatwick £109
Take a look at their website at www.ginandtonic.biz.
We continue to look to add to the Benefits of membership for members. For a full list, click here.
FANTASTIC SUMMER OFFER ON CONFERENCES
This is a short seasonal offer so please take advantage while it lasts!
Half a day delegate rate – £25per person (discounted from £30 pp)
Day delegate rate – £32 per person (discounted from £60pp)
24hour delegate rate – £120 per person (discounted from £150pp)
We now have thirty beautifully appointed bedrooms.
Six new rooms built in The Summer House. These rooms have private car parking spaces, offer fantastic views across the lake and of the golf course, and they are modern and very spacious with walk – in showers and heated flooring.
We have also just opened 5 more rooms- Lake View rooms that are certainly comparable to the wonderful rooms in The Summer House. Our guests have been extremely complimentary.
We would also like to offer you a chance to stay in The Summer House for a special introduction price of £50 for one night stay bed and breakfast.
To reserve your event please email: Katarina Hlavata or telephone 01635 581000
Offer ends on 31st August 2010
Divot Repair Bags Deployed
Donnington Grove already has an excellent course, one of the best in the area, but we are not complacent about it and are always looking at ways
to make it even better for our members and visitors. Our latest initiative is the introduction of a mobile divot repair system.
We have all been in the situation where we hit a great shot straight down the fairway only to find our ball lying in a divot, making the next shot somewhat tricky. Frustrating, isn’t it! Our divot repair system let’s you, the golfer, help us keep the course in tip top condition throughout the year.
Divot repair bags filled with a soil/sand/seed mix may now be taken from a rail on a mobile trailer – see photo. The contents of the bag are sprinkled into divots as they are found when playing a particular hole. At the end of the hole, the bags are dropped into a box on the next tee. The trailer will be moved from hole to hole by the green keepers as and when required.
Graduate Membership
New Membership Category for the Under 27’s
If you are keen on golf, are over 21 and under 27 and find golf club membership expensive, then look no further than Donnington Grove Country Club, where we have one of the best courses in the area; a great clubhouse, with a friendly environment; and really good practice facilities.
Graduate Membership for only £580
We are pleased to announce the launch of our new Graduate membership for the younger golfer who is just starting out on their career. Many younger golfers find the move from Junior or Colt to full membership a huge financial leap. This often leads to them giving up the game or playing only occasionally as a visitor. Here at Donnington Grove we have the answer with our Graduate Membership for those over 21 and under 27 years of age.
Annual Graduate membership is £700 and there is no joining fee. If you join in June, you will only have to pay £580 for as much golf as you like until 31st March 2011 when memberships are renewed; and we will give you £50 to spend at the Club.
Apart from a membership that offers exceptional value, you will find there are many other benefits of joining us at Donnington Grove. For example, we have reciprocal arrangements with 9 other clubs where you can play free.
If you want to find out more about our Graduate Membership visit our membership page or alternatively contact Dave Allen.
Top Golf Tips (8)
Stretching Exercises For Golfers
If you want to increase the power and range of motion of your swing, then you must definitely try out some stretching exercises to improve your game, as well as to prevent any jerks that you may experience during the game. Doing some stretching exercises regularly helps to prevent any internal injury that may occur due to sudden strain while playing golf.
An ideal warm up regime should take between 15 to 20 minutes consisting of some simple but effective stretching exercises. Below are a few exercises that you could try.
Brisk Walking: Walking with low skips for 3-5 minutes warms up the body and prepares and loosens any stiffness in the muscles.
Squatting with the help of a support: Squatting is another form of popular exercise that is helpful for golfers. It elevates the heart rate and increases blood flow in the whole body, thus preparing it for the action. While squatting, you must remember that you must squat till your thighs are parallel with the ground. Repeat the exercise approximately 15 times.
For a change, you can also try single leg squat using a support. Lift one leg at a time while you use a golf club as a support and place it on the opposite knee. Try to make an angle of 90 degrees. Now squat till the knee of the leg supporting the other leg is parallel with the ground.
Arm Swings: Stand with both your arms by your side. Swing your left arm in clockwise and anticlockwise directions for at least 30 seconds. Similarly swing your right arm. This will help you in achieving the correct swing which you desire in your game to get the required length. It is a great exercise for avoiding any injuries in arms and is a must for all golfers.
Some other popular exercises are waist rotations, bends, shoulder stretching, wrist rotation and leg swings. All or some of the exercise forms if incorporated in the warm up regime will definitely prove useful for any player. So get ready for some warm up sessions before you jump into action.
Top Golf Tips (5)
Using Pool Cues to Improve Your Driving

There is nothing more frustrating than having to search through the woods or even wade through the lake to find your ball. All golfers want to have the natural ability to drive the ball off the tee far and straight! This drill will help you too improve your contact off the tee as well as helping you to eliminate the tendency to slice your shots.
The main reasons for these problems are that you can’t make contact on the centre of the clubface with your driver and this is costing you in distance and accuracy. You will know if you are doing this as when you hit the ball it will feel like a brick. If you hit it off the toe, you’ll feel a soft impact, like you whacked an old apple.
Lay four Pool Cues or anything equivalent on the ground vertically. The spaces between the cues should be slightly wider than your clubhead. Address an imaginary ball in the middle lane. If you tend to hit it off the toe, take practice swings making sure your clubhead travels through the far lane after impact. If you hit it off the heel (or tend to shank your irons), your downswing path should go through the near lane. After 10 practice swings, tee up a ball and swing away. Now that you’re slotted correctly, you’ll hit it square and the same distance every time.
The next golf tip is ‘Learn to Chip with the Water Bottle Trick’
Top Golf Tips (4)
Golf Tip 4: How to escape the sands of time
There is nothing worse than when you are playing a smooth round of golf and then all of a sudden you find yourself stuck in the sand! Countless times have I been on a winning streak and then held back by one bad turn in the pit. This tip is to help with that situation by playing the sand instead of the ball. Ironically the best way to get out of the sand is by ignoring the ball.
When you’re in a greenside bunker the club should never touch the ball. You want your wedge to toss the sand beneath and behind the ball onto the green. The ball will float out on a wave of sand right onto the green.
You must convince yourself that the ball is an afterthought on these shots. To practice this, stand in the flat of a practice bunker and place two tees opposite your left instep.
YOU DO NOT NEED A BALL! Hinge your wrists quickly on the backswing to create an upright path, then swing down and let your sand wedge hit about two inches behind the tees. Make a full follow-through, finishing with your hands at shoulder height. You’ll see that the tess have flown up and toward the hole along with the sand you sprayed. Repeat this several times and see how high and far you can make the tees fly! Then drop a ball down and repeat the swing. Hopefully this drill will make escaping the bunkers an easy stress free shot.
Next tip is how to use pool cues to improve your Driving!
Top Golf Tips (1)
1. Brush Your Chip Shots To Hit Them Close To The Pin
Many people have difficulty hitting crisp shots that stop close enough for realistic one-putts! Hopefully this tip and technique can help you. Hitting the ball puts too much grass between it and the clubface however picking it cleanly produces a lower trajectory off the bottom edge of your wedge with little or no backspin.
This is called the ‘brush the grass’ drill and is something you should practice next time you get the chance. Before you hit your first shot, make at least 20 pitch swings without a ball and look at your divot after every one. Make sure your wedge hits the ground on each attempt but doesn’t dig into it. Think about ‘brushing’ the grass and you should be able to feel the club gently bump the bottom of the ground. Your divot should look like the grass has been brushed flat but no dirt has left the ground. When you have perfected this drill you should be able to see a crisp ball contact on or about, the third or fourth groove up the face of your wedge, a nice amount of backspin and makeable putts!
When you put this into practise on the course think about the image of the brushed grass. Make sure your grip is light and relaxed. If you are having problems with the leading edge of your wedge making dirt divots, open the face a little more. When you’ve successfully ‘brushed’ the grass two consecutive times without a divot, move in and immediately pitch the ball onto the green with the same swing.
Tomorrows tip includes the best way to use your irons!

