Making golf accessible for all
The Paragolfer at Woburn is not for players in elite competitions. The plan is to lend it to other clubs, to introduce as many people as possible to the sport’s benefits at recreational level and demonstrate more widely that those with lower-limb disabilities need not be excluded from the sport.
The R&A Foundation’s funding has also supported The Golf Trust in its work with Woburn to ensure that the device’s potential is realised, and that Woburn is fully equipped with the resources and expertise to make the venue fully accessible to those with disabilities.
Best practice will be followed everywhere from the bar and lounge to the locker room and practice areas. The course itself will also become more user-friendly. Barker says clubs should consider those with disabilities when undertaking such work, such as the renovation of bunkers.
EDGA has already been training coaches at Woburn. Other staff will be given advice, the club’s communications strategy will raise awareness and a plan is in place to engage with surrounding communities, including Stoke Mandeville Hospital, home to the National Spinal Injuries Centre.
“Between The Golf Trust, Woburn, ourselves and EDGA, hopefully we can make this a bit of a disability hub,” notes Barker. “So it’s not just about the Paragolfer, it’s about how we use it, how we engage with the local community, with coaches and clubs nearby, to make sure more people are introduced to the sport. It’s a much more holistic approach than just the provision of a Paragolfer.”
Jason O’Malley, Managing Director at Woburn, added, “Woburn Golf Club was extremely grateful and honoured when, through The R&A Foundation, it received the donation of a Paragolfer.
“As a club, having hosted the inaugural G4D Open in 2023 and again in 2024, Woburn is committed to working closely with EDGA towards improving the accessibility of golf for all disabled categories. As a club we look forward to welcoming those requiring the use of a Paragolfer and our dedicated team of staff will be on hand to assist, which will include golf lessons.”
Indeed, in October 2024, working in collaboration with Woburn, The Golf Trust delivered the venue’s first golf taster sessions curated for wheelchair users and people with mobility impairments. Both sessions were fully subscribed and offered attendees the transformational opportunity to stand and play golf using a Paragolfer.
What golf can offer
Attendees included wheelchair users and people with mobility impairments such as Parkinson’s, Cerebral palsy, spinal cord injury and muscular dystrophy. “Today has been full of moments of joy,” commented Co-Founder of The Golf Trust, Cae Menai-Davis. “There is nothing quite like witnessing that life changing moment as a user stands, sometimes for the very first time in years.
“But, for us, this is the start of their journey. Disabled people want to be active, to connect with others, to be social and to be part of a community and that is what golf can give them.”
According to the World Health Organization, an estimated one in six people experience significant disability. While there is limited reliable data, many are already playing at grassroots level and many more would join them if they were made aware of the opportunities.
Barker would love to build on the pathway for golfers with a disability, add more tournaments, especially on the continent, maybe a world championship and a place for golf at the Paralympics.
But it is just as important that more are encouraged to play the game for fun. “We want to see more opportunities for people with a disability to take up the game, and more provision for them at clubs,” he adds. “It’s our hope that clubs, organisations and charities around the UK might be persuaded to invest in one and we would have more around the country.
“It would be lovely to get to a point where we see someone with a disability out on the course, and we don't regard it as unusual. They would be just another golfer out there playing.”