Pickleball

 
 

Pickleball Club

Pickleball Club is the newest club in Auchterarder!

We are a group of all ages who come together at Auchterarder High School almost daily to play Pickleball.

The emphasis is on having fun while learning a new sport. Pickleball is an up-and-coming sport in the local area, so come along, meet some new people and get active!

Sessions

  • Monday 6-7 pm: Perth Pickleball competitive and friendly league team training

  • Tuesday 6-7 pm & 7-8 pm: mixed match play

  • Wednesday 6-7 pm: for beginners, intermediate and competitive match play in designated courts

  • Thursday 6-7 pm: over 60s session

  • Friday: for introductory sessions for newcomers monthly

  • Saturday 11-12 am: Beginners and over 60s social play.

    • This is the session beginners should attend following an introductory session unless they have been advised they can go straight into match-play sessions.

  • Sundays: We hope to have access on Sundays in the future for league games/friendlies and social play with the league fixtures.

Book your spot via the Spond app

Places are limited for each session. When you register, an admin from the group will invite you via your email or mobile number to join our spond team.

Fee & ways to pay

The fee is £3 per session/hour.

Payments are by bank transfer to:

  • Virgin Money Account Auchterarder Community Sport & Recreation

  • Sort Code: 82-67-09 Account Number: 80173919 Reference: Pickleball dd/mm/yy

Membership Options

  • £30 for 10 sessions + 1 free session

  • £48 for 16 sessions + 2 free sessions

For more information

If you have any questions or need pickleball-related information

How to register 

To register in the club, complete the registration form.

Club rules

As a member of Pickleball Scotland, our club sessions and coaching activities have been developed to incorporate Pickleball Scotland’s five key values:

  1. Be safe: Includes warming up, making sure play stops when the ball rolls across courts, keeping people physically and emotionally safe, and safeguarding issues.

  2. Have fun: Players and coaches are responsible for creating a fun and inclusive environment which promotes physical, mental and social health.

  3. Game on: Use the game to help people learn tactics and skills - conditioned games can be invented.

  4. Be generous: As a player praise your opponents' good shots; be generous with line calls, if in doubt the ball is in.

  5. Efforts are successes: Winning is not everything. Encourage building motivation towards improvement rather than winning; use positive comments when things are working well more than negative comments when things are not going well.