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• #2
Bristol had a polished wood court. It was ok.
IT used to get covered in skidmarks and be a bit unusable until it was cleaned. Ask Rich or Andre for more info.
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• #3
the plastic matting that stitches together is really good. Not what its called.
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• #4
If we found a large enough indoor space, and it needed to be surfaced for polo use, what would be the perfect choice?
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• #5
asphalt
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• #6
oh god
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• #7
We're potentially getting use of a space with brand new junkers beech wooden flooring.
No idea if that is polo friendly or not. Any ideas?
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• #8
Sounds awesome, but... Would they still be happy with you using it when you've gouged massive chunks of it out with your bikes...
#worstcasescenario -
• #9
No idea. We'll need to work out if the wood surface would in fact give in or if it would hold up. Need to speak to bristol.
the plastic matting that stitches together is really good. Not what its called.
This sounds good, any more details on the material? Who uses it?
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• #10
No idea. We'll need to work out if the wood surface would in fact give in or if it would hold up. Need to speak to bristol.
Remembering that bikes have hard relatively pointy things like pedals / bolts / brake levers and calipers, that will gouge wood when people fall badly.
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• #11
We'll just have to introduce a 'no crashing' rule :)
Those lucky enough to have had a shot of an indoor polo court, what were the surfaces and how did they play? We're looking into a few options up here.
How does polished wood handle?
What works and what doesn't?