Well, I’ve just admitted it rather publicly, and I’m pretty
sure I’ve mentioned it before, so I guess it’s not really a secret, is it? I am openly fascinated by lawn bowls…?
I’ve never played bowls in my life (bocce – yes, lawn bowls
– no), although I suspect it’s just a matter of time. I keep looking at bowls clubs and thinking:
“I want to go there.” I sometimes look at the lawn bowls results in the paper, even though I have no idea what any of it means. Occasionally, I’ll
watch lawn bowls on TV, even though I’m sure it’s a ridiculous sport to
televise. Surely lawn bowls is up there
with cricket and golf as being sports that are “rather boring to watch, really”?
And yet, it’s oddly fascinating. Especially those weird, tedious one-on-one
matches where two people take an awfully long time to battle it out in a very
calm and careful manner. The tension
seems to be palpably mounting as nothing much happens at all.
I made an observation some years ago that every single
Australian country town I have ever visited – no matter how small – had a bowls
club and a Country Women’s Association located somewhere nearby. Sometimes a cluster of towns will band
together to support these things, but I’m almost sure there isn’t a single town
in Australia where you could not join a bowls club.
It’s actually become a bit of a hobby of mine – bowls club
and CWA hall spotting. Whenever I travel
I can’t help taking a look at the maps in the hotels’ phone books to see where
the bowls clubs are. They’re marked out
with their own special icon – just like churches, hospitals, public toilets and
scout halls. Bowls clubs are *that*
fundamental to the community. No other
sport/social club gets that. Not even
the CWA.
The last time I went on a road trip with my mother, I made
her drive out to the middle of nowhere, just because the map said there was a
bowls club there. I wanted to confirm it
for myself because, as far as I could tell, there wasn’t actually a town
anywhere near it. It was actually on the
grounds of a sugar mill. There were only
something like five houses in the area, but there was bowls club.
This ubiquity of bowls clubs and CWA halls made me think
that, should I ever move to a small town, I should join the CWA and take up
bowls. My social life would be
completely sorted. Need to feel like you
belong to a community? Bing! You’re in it.
I actually do a really bad job of joining “communities”. I’m just not very good at turning up. I’ll keep it up for a few years, but then
I’ll find an excuse to give it a miss for a couple of weeks in a row… and the
next thing I know it’s three years later and I’m not even getting the Christmas
party invites anymore. I have to try a
bit better with my fencing club, but in the last month I’ve missed several club
nights and I’m probably going to miss the first BBQ of the year, so it’s not
looking good.
Sadly, I think I’m not alone in this. I said bowls clubs were *that* important to a
community… but I think that’s a historical significance, rather than a current
one. I don’t personally know anyone who
is a member of a bowls club. I know
people who play bocce occasionally, in a back yard, but not anyone who
bowls. Additionally, I’m not sure people
are building new club grounds. In the
city where I live all of the existing bowls clubs are in the old suburbs. You know – the suburbs that developed back in
the day where a suburb would have everything expected in a small town (at least
two churches, a primary school, a pub, a corner store and a park big enough to
play football games – and a bowls club).
These were the suburbs that came about before everyone drove
everywhere. None of the newer suburbs
have half the stuff that was just standard in the older models – and none of
them have bowls clubs. I would have
thought some of the newer satellite suburbs might build one, but nope.
And I don’t know if they are attracting new members. The stereotypical bowls club member is… well…
old. Little old grey-haired ladies and
long-retired gentlemen. The only time
I’ve seen bowls clubs in full use is during the middle of the day, when all the
white-haired folk are meeting for their club matches. These people don’t have a very long life
expectancy, and what happens to these clubs and associations when their base of
retirees “cross the rainbow bridge”? Who
is replacing these people?
Certainly not people who work for a living. I would have joined the local CWA ages ago,
if they had any meetings that weren’t during business hours. I have to admit, probably one of the main
reasons I haven’t taken up lawn bowls yet is the fact that (last time I checked my local clubs) the games are all
played during the day. Plus, I find the whole "men's days, women's days, mixed days" a bit intimidating I feel as if I'm not welcome at a club if the only time I can attend happens to be a "men's day". I’m not
interested in the “barefoot bowls” thing, which seems to involve badly dressed
men trying to bowl and drink beer at the same time. But… if that’s what it takes to save the
bowls clubs, then that’s what it takes.
Personally, I think they should try diversifying by bringing
in other boules related sports: bocce,
petanque, that sort of thing. Lawn bowls
is so very British, but the Australian population is much more diverse. I say:
Bring in the European sports and fill your thinning ranks with elderly
Italians – we have plenty of those.
Actually, what they really need to do is have more of a "just pop in" approach to bowls, like they have with ten-pin bowling. The clubs in my city all work on the basis that you can only play during club sessions, but I think it would work better if the club sessions were simply the only time when you couldn't just turn up and try for a game. If I knew I didn't have to wait for a game day (specifically ladies or mixed) but could just pop over and play a "pick-up" match with anyone who happened to be hanging around, I might be more inclined to just pop over:
"Hey, what are you doing after work? Wanna go play bowls and have a drink?"
"Can we play petanque instead?"
"Sure, why not?"
That could work.
Actually, what they really need to do is have more of a "just pop in" approach to bowls, like they have with ten-pin bowling. The clubs in my city all work on the basis that you can only play during club sessions, but I think it would work better if the club sessions were simply the only time when you couldn't just turn up and try for a game. If I knew I didn't have to wait for a game day (specifically ladies or mixed) but could just pop over and play a "pick-up" match with anyone who happened to be hanging around, I might be more inclined to just pop over:
"Hey, what are you doing after work? Wanna go play bowls and have a drink?"
"Can we play petanque instead?"
"Sure, why not?"
That could work.
It turns out one of my uncles is a member of a bowls club - he just doesn't bowl.
ReplyDeleteI say he should pick up the slack and at least get himself a pair of white shoes...