Educational Establishments
Laurence Gale MSc meets the Head Groundsman at Watford Grammar School, Mark Field, whose eight year tenure has resulted in improved playing surfaces and a better understanding of maintenance equipment requirements by the powers that be
Watford Grammar
A passion for turf ...
“ M The Verti-D Drain has
been a godsend this winter, helping to keep the pitches playable through one of the wettest winters on record
70 I PC APRIL/MAY 2014
ark Field, Head Groundsman at Watford Grammar School, is a dab hand with a camera. It was his winning entry in the February Pitchcare Photo
competition - his trusted Trimax shown close-up mowing - that prompted me to pay a visit to the Hertfordshire school to find out more.
The Watford Grammar School grew from
the Watford Free School, a charity school for sixty pupils - forty boys and twenty girls - founded by Dame Elizabeth Fuller in 1704, on ground next to the parish churchyard in the
centre of Watford. The schools became separate foundations for boys and girls in 1881, and the boys school moved to its present site in 1912. As an outstanding school, Watford
Grammar School for Boys became an Academy in 2010 and now has over 1200 students. It is set in twenty hectares, with the school playing fields split over two sites. Pupils are drawn from a wide catchment area and are able to enjoy participating in many activities, including sport and music. Mark has been at the school eight years. He was born and raised on a large dairy farm
Mark’s winning entry into the February photo competition
Second site rugby pitches
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