Renowned for its leading greenkeeping and golf course management training and education programmes, which have produced many of the world's top greenkeepers, SRUC Elmwood Golf Course has recently invested in a new fleet of John Deere and ancillary equipment supplied by local dealer The Double A Trading Company Ltd.
Bought with a full service and maintenance contract following a rigorous three-way tender process, the extensive John Deere fleet includes new A Model fairway, rough and surrounds mowers, walk-behind and ride-on greens mowers, Gator utility vehicles, amenity turf sprayer and top dresser attachments, compact tractors and a commercial walk-behind rotary mower.

Deputy manager Matt Baird (seated right) with greenkeepers Daniel Lang (centre) and Ryan Stenhouse, and some of the new John Deere machines at SRUC Elmwood Golf Course.
The deal also included a Tru-Turf greens roller, Lewis 2-tonne trailer and an Air 2G2 air injection machine, all supplied by Double A, who additionally advised the college on converting and equipping the course workshop to John Deere dealer standards.
"The SRUC procurement team did a lot of the groundwork for the tender, and I was involved in the assessment and scoring process," says Matt Baird, deputy manager, course management at SRUC Elmwood. The college is located at Cupar in Fife, close to the 'home of golf' at St Andrews Links. "The rest of the greenkeeping team also gave constructive feedback on the machines we had on demonstration.
"This was the first time I've been involved in such a process and it was really interesting to see how a whole package deal like this comes together. The response from John Deere and Double A was very comprehensive, and they scored particularly well on areas like service and maintenance, call-out times, operator training and overall value for money.
"In addition, Double A could offer everything we needed, across the board, which was a definite plus. We worked together to identify the best equipment choices, and I was also introduced to some things I never knew about, such as the Air 2G2 injector."
"As a result, the course is constantly changing - as part of their course students have to complete certain tasks, so they're always doing something, whether it's remodelling tees, bunkers or greens or any other type of on-course work. It all feeds into the curriculum and goes a long way to explaining how the college has built up such a great reputation for training first-class greenkeepers."