Work is due to start at the end of October on eliminating Durbanville’s much-criticised ridge and furrow.
Manager Dean Diedericks said: “We are going to sort out the undulations but we also want to make the turn wider and give consideration to moving the rail around the turn.
“Our aim is to have the work finished by the end of March but whether we will be back racing at that stage depends on how the track recovers.”
In recent years the country course has managed to attract horses of the calibre of Variety Club, Capetown Noir and Act Of War for the Matchem Stakes – plus Ebony Flyer and Inara for the Diana – but many trainers have been reluctant to run good horses there for risk of damaging them on the ridge and furrow, particularly when the ground is firm.
Durbanville plays an important part in the training of horses at Milnerton and Philippi as it used for gallops every week, and closing the course for a minimum of five months will cause obvious problems.
However Diedericks said: “What we do about the gallops is still being debated but we are going to do the work in two phases – the back stretch and the rest. There is also the possibility of accommodating gallops at Kenilworth, perhaps keeping the winter course open during the summer for the purpose.”
Plans to build a polytrack at Durbanville have been abandoned. Most of the trainers were against it and, at a meeting to discuss the matter, only three voted in favour.
Michael Clower