Golfers at the Hindman Park Golf Course in Little Rock, Arkansa have thing to show off just about - they have the greenest green in the put across. Not the color open space - playing field as in environmentally gracious. Environmentally palsy-walsy golf courses came to national public interest nearly ten years ago, once the Environmental Protection Agency, the American Society of Golf Course Architects (ASGCA), the United States Golf Association (USGA), Audubon International and the National Wildlife Federation came mutually and created a set of guidelines for nonindustrial greener outdoor game courses.
According to the Audubon Society, golf game courses are a crude position (no pun meant) to go round for life shelters and habitats. The guidelines, published in 1997, speech act tips and suggestions for outdoor game path owners and municipalities that save the veggie even greener environmentally. Hindman Park's Supervisor took their suggestions to hunch. He and his crew have put up over and done with 40 nesting boxes about the course, and constituted 100 fruit trees to promote and draw in life. The directed is to add another 100 trees each of the subsequent cardinal time of life - all of which will spring lacking the aid of pesticides or fertilizers.