Senior Stroke Play

Event Details

Date: Wednesday, 24 June 2026

Format: Individual

Scoring: Strokeplay

Category: Senior

Entry Fee: £15.00

Entry Method: Online


Individual strokeplay open competition restricted to players aged over 55. Players must complete all 18 holes, recording gross score on the card; nett score is calculated as gross score minus playing handicap. Played from Yellow Tees. No handicap limit is stated for this event. Entry fee is £15 per player for both members and visitors (Openplay members are also due a £20 green fee on top of the entry fee). Catering is available from 45 minutes before the first tee time, with everything prepared fresh and cooked to order — allow plenty of time before your tee time. Bar and catering accepts cash or card for payments over £5. Buggies are available to hire; those with a medical certificate should contact the club directly to reserve one. Book via the Open Competitions Booking tab on the club website, or contact the club on 01464 820363 or administrator@inschgolfclub.co.uk.


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Venue

Insch Golf Club

Insch, Aberdeenshire, Scotland

Insch Golf Club is an 18-hole parkland course situated in the village of Insch in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, approximately 40 miles northwest of Aberdeen. Golf in Insch was first recorded before the First World War, with a nine-hole course laid around Dunnydeer Hill. The course moved to its present location around 1923 but was requisitioned by the War Department in 1940 for use as a grenade range, bringing golf in the village to a halt for several decades. A committee was formed in 1977 to revive the game locally, and a new nine-hole course was constructed by voluntary labour alongside the Valentine Burn, reopening for play in 1982. The layout was extended to 18 holes with 12 new holes added on the slopes of Dunnydeer, a process completed and officially opened in June 1997. The course plays to a par of 69 over 5,371 yards and occupies undulating terrain set between the distinctive hills of Bennachie and Dunnydeer. Water features prominently throughout the layout, with the Valentine Burn and other hazards coming into play on multiple holes. The fairways are tree-lined in places and the greens are noted for their pace and subtle undulation, placing a premium on accuracy and course management rather than length. The course divides into two distinct sections separated by a road crossing, with holes 3 to 14 occupying the more wooded and elevated ground on the slopes of Dunnydeer, offering the most scenic and challenging golf on the course, while the opening two and closing four holes occupy flatter ground. The final two holes are a notable quirk, both being short par 3s played from the same tee box in opposite directions. A modern clubhouse opened in April 2004, officially launched by Open Champion Paul Lawrie, and features floor-to-ceiling windows offering panoramic views across the old course and up to Dunnydeer. The club has no recorded designer on its modern incarnation, having been built largely through community effort, and carries no significant professional tournament history, though it is regarded as a well-maintained and characterful example of rural Aberdeenshire parkland golf.