North

New Whitehorse disc golf course may prevent crime: golfer

A Whitehorse disc golf course has been hit by vandals, for the third time. The Whitehorse Disc Golf Association hopes a permanent, year-round course will eliminate the problem.

Local enthusiasts make pitch to develop semi-permanent, year-round course, amid recurring vandalism

Frisbee golfers collect their damaged targets on Friday. Along with the busted equipment, the vandal(s) left an unopened case of Budweiser. (submitted by Ben Monkman)

Whitehorse disc golfers have had one of their courses vandalized, again. It's the third time it's happened over the past year.

Alan Hill of the Whitehorse Disc Golf Association said the latest incident happened sometime Thursday night. The temporary, 19-hole course is set up in a wooded area between the Alaska Highway and the McIntyre Creek pump station.

Vandals destroyed 12 of the course's 19 targets, which are made of stove pipes, hung in trees or mounted on posts. In the game, disc golf players must hit the targets with a frisbee, but the vandals used something else.

"It looks like they hit them with the blunt end of an axe," said Hill. 

"And the ones that were the stand-alones, on the wood posts, they just chopped the wood post. Or else, if they were hanging from a tree, they just chopped a branch of the tree."

Plans for a permanent course

The incident comes as the association applies to develop a more permanent course, in the same location. An application is now before city council.

Disc golfer Noel Sinclair believes that developing the area might reduce the likelihood of further vandalism.

"If you think about having a permanent recreational facility down there, that lots of people are using, you're going to find that some of those sort of negative elements are just going to be kind of chased out of there," Sinclair said.

Developing the course would involve constructing tee pads and installing signs through a 6-hectare swath of forest. The hanging stovepipes would be replaced by removable basket targets, mounted in concrete sleeves in the ground.

A public input session on the proposed course will be held next Tuesday, with council expected to make a decision in April.