Showing posts with label new year resolutions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new year resolutions. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

Golf Resolutions for 2019

We're a week into the new year and I haven't posted my annual golf resolutions. Sorry for procrastinating. First, how did I do with last year's resolutions?

Resolution #1: Continue to stay fit for golf.  So far, so good on this one. Even with the addition of ballroom dancing (aka "dancesport") to my fitness repertoire, I have maintained overall health. As I resolved last year, I've added regular foot care to my routine. I bought a battery-operated scrub brush with a pumice stone attachment to keep my feet callous-free.

Resolution #2: Break 80. Nope, not yet. In fact, I didn't even keep my handicap in 2018 (gasp!). As any East Coaster knows, it was an unusually rainy spring, summer and fall. Golf-wise, it was kind of a lost season. Due to muddy conditions and fairways that couldn't be mowed due to rain, I mainly shot rounds in the mid-90s. I couldn't bring myself to record scores, since they'd drop my glorious 14.5 handicap from 2017. Most of my 2018 season looked like this:

My errant pink ball, in jail. The flag is somewhere behind those trees.
I didn't start scoring in the upper 80s till November, when the weather dried out, but by then the handicap season was over. 

Resolution #3: Grow the game. I've been continuing to encourage the young golfers in my life to enjoy the game. My 10-year-old goddaughter has started playing tournaments and last summer I had the pleasure of playing another par-3 course with her. My oldest nephew continues to play golf with his friends. And my two youngest nephews, who are 5 and 7, now incorporate golf activities into their playtime. When they visit my house, they like to create putting practice surfaces using my yoga mats with hand weights propped underneath to simulate undulating greens. How cute is that!

Okay, so how about 2019?

Resolution #1: Continue to stay fit for golf.  I think this will be a permanent resolution. I see golfers out there walking with pull-carts or carrying bags well into their 70s and even 80s. If I want to be one of them someday, I need to take care of my health.

Resolution #2: Break 80. This is going to a resolution until I just finally do it. My all-time lowest score was 83, so it's just a matter of time on this one.

Resolution #3Maintain a handicap. So much of golf depends on the weather. And though I can blame the rain for not making progress in 2018, I realize I could learn to play better in adverse conditions. Of course, it's easier when conditions are good. This winter, I've had a few stolen days when the weather was warm and dry enough to go out. Yesterday, we had a day with temps in the 50s, and I shot an 87. So things are looking up for 2019. Stay tuned!


Monday, January 1, 2018

Golf Resolutions for 2018


Happy New Year. Again. Can you believe I've been writing this golf blog for 6 years? And once again, I begin the year with a look back at my golf resolutions and a look forward to new ones.

Last year, I kept it simple with:

#1: Stay fit for golf. Well, I made it through the year without any major injuries. My gluteal pseudo-sciatica pain seems to be under control and I've been able to survive 5-hour plane rides and even 8-hour car drives without a relapse. I still stretch like crazy, do Pilates every week, and do at least 30 minutes of low-impact cardio every day, with hand-weight and upper-body exercises a few times a week. I was fit enough to play at least 50 rounds this past year, so I think I did okay with this resolution.

Now how about 2018?

Resolution #1: Continue to stay fit for golf.  Since I started golfing, I have avoided riding golf carts and walk with my pull-cart instead. As a result, I routinely develop minor foot issues such as black toenails and calluses. Toward the end of the 2017 season, I developed a rather persistent corn on my left pinky-toe, which is taking more than a week to heal. So, foot care is something I will need to work into my overall fitness routine. (Sorry if that's TMI, but on the other hand, if you have a foot fetish, maybe that paragraph turned you on in a weird way.)

Resolution #2: Break 80. I broke 100 in 2011, I broke 90 in 2012. Theoretically, I should have broken 80 in 2013. But, as most amateur golfers know, it just ain't that easy. However, in late-August, I shot my personal best of 83. And thanks to a bunch of other rounds in the low-to-mid 80s this past year, I ended the season with a 14.5 handicap. If all goes well, in 2018, I may just shave off 4 more strokes off my all-time low and break 80.

Resolution #3: Grow the game. I've always been kind of a golf evangelist among my family and friends. Ever since I started playing, I've made an effort to take my young nephews out to the putting green or the driving range just for fun. I've taken several of them to their first golf lesson or their first round on a real golf course. When my oldest nephew was 12, I let him drive a golf cart by himself for the first time. Now, he's 25 and has rekindled his interest in golf. He said he likes golf because "It's a gentleman's game, but you still get dirty and stuff." He also likes that he can hit balls really far. Hubby and I have taken him out golfing a few times and we really enjoy watching his game develop. I have 7 nephews, so if all of them end up being golfers, I think I will have done a decent job growing the game.

I can also take credit for introducing my goddaughter to golf. I gave her a Snoopy set of plastic golf clubs when she was a toddler, so I started the brainwashing early. Now she's 8 and has been taking lessons for less than a year, but her mother says she's ready to play tournaments soon. Hubby and I took her to her first round on a par-3 course. We look forward to taking her out to an 18-hole course this summer.

If I knew when I was young that golf was this much fun, I would have started at a much younger age. But watching these young people fall in love with the game is the next best thing.

That's it for now. I better stop making resolutions before the year has even begun. The weather is in the teens around here, and all the local golf courses are closed. In a week or so, temps might edge back into the 30s, so I might manage to get out for a winter round. Stay tuned.

Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Golf Resolutions for 2017


Happy New Year (a few days late)! This will be brief since I only had one resolution last year:

#1Get fit for golf.  How did I do? Well, my forearm tendinitis is gone, and my gluteal and leg pains have improved but not disappeared. However, I did manage to log 20 or so rounds of golf in 2016, and I held steady with a 17.6 handicap at the end of the season. I managed to break my course record at one of my local haunts with an 88, and I shot an 87 at another local course, tying my personal best there. I even managed to gain some distance off the tee. So, I suppose I was fit enough for some golf in 2016. 

For my new year's resolution, I want to continue the trend and keep it simple:

Resolution #1: Stay fit for golf. While I'm being phased out in physical therapy, I've started up another golf strength training weekly session at the gym, added some Pilates reformer sessions and even signed up for monthly massages. In the off-season, I'm focusing on building up core and upper body strength, while working on rotational flexibility too -- these are all important to the golf swing.

It looks like a cold winter ahead, so I may not post a new update till spring. The pictures in this post are from New Year's Day, when it was unseasonably warm and hubby and I shared a small bucket of balls. Even though I haven't swung a club for 2 months, I managed to get off a decent shot or two. And I didn't hurt myself. A good omen, I think.



Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Golf Resolutions for 2016

Another year has flown by and it's time to reflect on my golfy pursuits of the past year and craft some attainable goals for the new one.

First, let's review and see how I did last year.

#1: Lower my handicap. I ended the season with a 17.5, which is lower than the previous year's 19. I think I could have done even better if my season had not been stymied by elbow tendonitis.
#2: Learn to enjoy playing competitively. I didn't play any tournaments this year, so I didn't get the chance to work at this resolution. I think it means I probably shouldn't have made it a resolution in the first place. Golf is a game to me, not a competition.
#3: Become a more consistent putter. Well this past year, hubby once made a point to compliment me on my putting, which is saying something. I think I have become a better greens reader, though, and I am more consistent about setting up with the ball slightly left of center to compensate for my right-eye dominance. It's a technique that really works. 
#4: Break 80 (or maybe just 85). Ummm, not yet. Shot some 89s though.
#5: Play another bucket list course. Still haven't made it out to Bandon Dunes. Does Port Royal in Bermuda count?


Twilight scene from my last December round of 2015, at Coronado Golf Course in San Diego, CA.

Okay, now for the new year's resolutions. I really just have one:

Resolution #1: Get fit for golf. After I injured my forearm a few months ago, I should have quit for the season, but I felt compelled to play 9 holes here and there because the weather was so awesome. I rested for a month, then played 3 rounds over the last two weeks in December. Hubby and I spent the Christmas holiday in Carlsbad, CA, and I knew it would be the last rounds before the cold East Coast winter. Though I wasn't doing my forearm any favors, it helped to wear a compression band while playing. I even made a birdie and several memorable pars.

During this winter downtime, I need to do more than rest my forearm. I believe that developing strength is key to preventing injury in golf, so I'm planning to enlist a personal trainer to help me increase my muscle strength, especially in my upper body and core, and correct muscle imbalances caused by golf, as well as work-related repetitive stress (e.g. sitting and typing on a computer). While I do plenty of cardio for endurance, plus pilates, yoga and stretching for flexibility, I have no strength training regimen to speak of, other than the muscle toning that comes with doing pilates.

I have an assessement appointment with a personal trainer at my gym on Thursday. He works with a lot of golfers. I'll keep you posted...

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Golf Resolutions for 2015

Happy New Year! Time to review last year's golf goals and set new ones for the upcoming year. It's always cold this time of year, but the thought of golf warms me up.



First, how did I do on last year's resolutions?

Resolution #1: Stop obsessing about getting longer. I did, sort of. Despite a temporary breakthrough with 200-plus-yard drives, I really didn't do much worrying about my driver distance. (I still want to get longer though.)

Resolution #2: Enter a hole-in-one million-dollar shootout contest. I didn't come across one this year, although I didn't look too hard to find one.
Resolution #3: Break 80 (or at least break 90 again). I didn't break 80 but I did break 90. Five times, in fact. So I consider this resolution achieved. It was mostly over the spring, which is what inspired me to finally get an official handicap.
Resolution #4: Make new golf buddies. Another resolution I achieved, thanks to Seri introducing me to a couple of her golf regulars. I also hope to reconnect with some former golf pals. Golf buddies may be fair-weather friends, but they also tend to be forever friends. If you've played golf with someone a couple of times, months or even years could go by and you could run into them somewhere and say, "Hey, we should go golfing sometime."
Resolution #5: Play another bucket list course. Did it, if you consider Streamsong a bucket list course. I think it is, since it has gotten a ton of buzz since opening in 2013. While hubby and I took a couple of different golf trips this year, Streamsong tops the list as this past year's bucket-list outing.

Okay, so in 2014 I achieved 4 out of 5 resolutions. Either I'm getting better at golf, or I'm getting better at crafting realistic resolutions. Now what are my resolutions for 2015?

Resolution #1: Lower my handicap. When I first registered for an official handicap in the spring, I logged in at 16.9. By the end of the season, it went up to 19. This year, I would like to get that number down. Lower than a 12 would be nice, but I will settle for a 15.
Resolution #2: Learn to enjoy playing competitively. Hubby and I played in a mixed couples tournament this past year, and I have to say I would have enjoyed it far more if we'd won. I think part of me never got in the game to begin with because my nature is to shrink from competition. The one time I'd won a charity tournament in the past, it was just from playing my usual game and then being surprised to find out I fared better than other women players in the end. I would like to learn how to play in a tournament, both to win and have fun at the same time.
Resolution #3: Become a more consistent putter. When I think about my golf swing, it usually involves an iron or driver. I really need to focus on developing a better, more consistent putting stroke too. In golf, putting is kind of important, ya know?
Resolution #4: Break 80 (or maybe just 85). This goes hand in hand with Resolution #1, but I would really like to score in the mid-80s at some point this year.
Resolution #5: Play another bucket list course. Hubby and I ain't getting any younger, and life is short. I think Bandon Dunes and Pinehurst are on our radar. Maybe we can even do both.

Now I want to get out and golf. Tomorrow is supposed to be 45 and partly sunny. Hubby said we could go out and hit balls, but I'm still trying to convince him to play a round. We shall see!

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Golf Resolutions for 2014

It's that time of year when I reflect on last year's golf goals and set new ones for the upcoming year.




How did I do on last year's resolutions?
Resolution #1: Get longer. I wanted to average 200, but after a back spasm in the spring and shedding a few pounds, I actually lost yardage. All summer long, I was only batting aound 170-180, though this seemed to pick up in the fall, thanks to taking up core-strengthening pilates.  
Resolution #2: Enter a hole-in-one million-dollar shootout contest. Still haven't been able to find one, but perhaps this year I will.
Resolution #3: Break 80. Not even close! Sorry to say, but I did not even break 90 once this whole past year. I did manage to score in the mid 90s most of the time though.
Resolution #4: Join a women’s league. Again, didn't do it. However, I did meet a defector from one of the local ladies leagues, and judging from some of her war stories, it sounds like perhaps I shouldn't want to join a women's league after all. 
Resolution #5: Play another bucket list course. Yes, finally a resolution that I achieved, Hubby and I played Torrey Pine North Course and South Course this past year, in addition to some other lovely courses.

So I fulfilled only 1 out of 5 resolutions. That sucks. Maybe it's time for me to set more realistic resolutions. If at first you don't succeed, lower your standards!

Here's my new list of resolutions for 2014:

Resolution #1: Stop obsessing about getting longer. If there's anything I should have learned by now, longer drives do not necessarily translate into lower scores. In fact, the defector from the ladies league only drives about 160 but consistently breaks 90. Part of this is due to her dead-on approach shots and one-putting. I need to stop chasing yardage and start working on my short game.
Resolution #2: Enter a hole-in-one million-dollar shootout contest. If one comes along, I will go for it, but it might be a better bet to just buy a lottery ticket.
Resolution #3: Break 80 (or at least break 90 again). I am keeping this resolution on the list since scoring low is always the goal. I broke 90 once before, and I know I can do it again. Here's hoping to breaking 80 too.
Resolution #4: Make new golf buddies. Golf buddies are literally fair-weather friends, so it's nice to have a lot of them in case someone can't make the tee time. However, I would also like to be able to play alone more often.
Resolution #5: Play another bucket list course. I believe this is doable since there are so many once-in-a-lifetime courses to play in the world. The only question is where to go next. And since I just bought my hubby a new Bushnell range-finder for Christmas, I am sure he's as anxious as me to hop a plane to a sunny fairway. It might be a month or two till our work schedules allow it, but in the meantime maybe a warm winter day will come along so I can get started on my other golf resolutions!


Monday, February 25, 2013

Twilight at Torrey Pines

I needed a winter break, so hubby and I flew west to the San Diego area in search of weather warm enough for golf. I shipped my old set of Ping G2s out there for the unexpectedly low price of $22 via FedEx 4-day ground, which sure beat carrying them on a plane. Somehow the stars aligned and hubby and I decided it was a good time to cross another bucket list course off our list. So we decided to play Torrey Pines South Course.

The website makes it look like a hassle to get a tee time; if you're a non-resident, you either pay a big fee to book ahead or get up at the crack of dawn and sign up for the daily waitlist. We didn't have to do either. Instead, we went in at around 9am on a Wednesday and put our names on the walk-on list for twilight, which starts at 1pm in winter. The starter said to come back around 12:30pm and we'd be out shortly after 1pm. I had a feeling if we wanted to pay the $183 morning greens fees, he would have been able to get us out without much delay. But $110 for twilight was about what we wanted to shell out, so after putting our names on the list, we headed to Carl's Jr. for breakfast and came back at around 11:30am to hit balls and warm up.

There's not much of a driving range at Torrey Pines, although it was a good place to check my distances and try out my assemblage of "new" clubs that I'd procured from the used clubs bins at Golf Mart, including a 12-degree Ping G15 driver and a Ping G10 3-wood that cost me $99 and $49 respectively.

At around 12:20pm, we headed back to the clubhouse to mill about and soak in the atmosphere. You know you're at a famous golf course when there are lots of people just there to take pictures. At around 12:45pm, our names were called, and I nearly wet my pants.

This is it. The big show, I thought. Torrey Pines South Course.


As it turned out, the whole affair started with a bit of confusion. The starter said we'd be going out at around 1:05 or 1:10, so we paid for the greens fees, got a receipt, rented 2 walking carts and headed down to Hole 1. The first holes for Torrey Pines North and South Courses are right next to each other, and there was a kiosk there, but it was unstaffed, so we waited near the first tee ground, thinking they'd announce what time we were actually going out. At around 1:05, I got antsy and went back up the starter.


"What time are we supposed to go out?" I asked.
"1:05 or 1:10," the starter said. He looked at the clock, "You should be on the tee box now."
"Are we 1:05 or 1:10? It's already 1:05!" I said. I didn't understand why the guy didn't give me an exact tee time, like every other golf course in the world. I tried a different tactic. "What are the names of the 2 others in our group?" I asked.
And he told me 2 names which I remembered long enough to run back to the first tee and call out. The two guys on the tee turned around and identified themselves as the 2 people in question.
"Okay, then," I said. "We're playing with you two."

I was a bit annoyed that the start was so disorganized. It was also perturbing at the end of the round when we were returning our pull-carts and the unfriendly staffers kept their heads down without a "thank you for playing" or even a "how was your round?" But I had to remind myself that this isn't a TPC resort course, but a municipal course run by the City of San Diego, with workers about as motivated for the kind of pay they are probably getting.

From that point, the round progressed as usual, with handshakes and self-introductions. One of the guys was a Scottish teaching pro and the other was a shaggy local, the kind who enjoyed hearing himself speak. Later, he would start telling me what I was doing wrong on my putts, and I would feel tempted to punch him in the nose. But for now, I did my best to tune him out and focus on my game.

From the forward tees, the South Course is a manageable 5467 yards. The first fairway is wide and welcoming, with the kind of grass that makes you want to have a picnic. I double-bogeyed the first hole, a par 4, but I didn't feel too bad about it at all.


If you've ever seen Torrey Pines on television, you already know there is a lot of the ocean in view. And parasailers love the coastal winds blowing along the cliffs on the front nine.


Hole 3 is a lovely downhill par 3. The back tees have to carry that scrub on the left. The forward tees are on the right, only 105 yards from the green.


I made it on the green, just barely hanging on the edge.


I four-putted from there. What can I say? The greens are wicked fast and too much mustard could send your ball right over the edge into the ocean.


The course is filled with Torrey pines like this:


And this:


Here's another fairway to heaven:


Look closely and you can see how close my approach shot landed to the pin:


Here was an intimidating par 5 fairway. Rolling hills, multi-staged bunkers.


I made it to this point in two shots. Just one more to get on in regulation. But I blew it. My third shot ended up in one of those bunkers.


On the back nine, the sun started disappearing. We could see the remnants of the Farmers Insurance Open, which Tiger Woods had won just a few weeks before. The excitement still lingered.


The last few holes were a blur. We rushed. At one hole, after I'd three-putted again, the shaggy local shook his head and said, "Right and short, right and short. Don't you see a pattern?" Now I know I suck at putting, but this guy missed so many putts I was surprised he even claimed to be a golfer. I thought he had some nerve to criticize anyone, let alone a perfect stranger.

After teeing off at the 17th hole, hubby and I starting running to our next shots. The Scottish pro had gotten a lift from the cart-riding shaggy local by now, and as they whizzed past us, the shaggy local said, "You don't have to run." And I rolled my eyes, thinking, first you're telling me how to putt, now you're telling me whether to walk or run? Knowing that I would soon be leaving the company of this buffoon was the only upside to realizing that our twilight round at Torrey Pines was soon coming to an end. The Scottish pro, on the other hand, had behaved like a perfect gentleman, exclaiming "Good drive!" or "Good ball!" whenever merited, and remaining politely silent when not.

There's a water fountain guarding the last green, and it was so dark that I couldn't find any yardage markers to gauge the distance for my approach shot. I took a guess with an 8-iron and came up a few yards short. My ball bounced on the fringe and rolled back into the water. Unfazed, I dropped a ball a club length or two from where the ball went in, and chipped it up, just to have the satisfaction of finishing a full 18.

Hubby and I shook hands with the other two, and somehow I think the Scottish pro was sincere when he smiled as he shook my hand and said, "Well-played!"



Friday, January 4, 2013

Golf Resolutions for 2013

About a year ago, I started this blog by announcing my golf resolutions for the year 2012. Here it is a year later, so it's time to take a look at how well I did.

Resolution #1: Get longer. Did it. I have achieved above-average driving distance with regularity. I credit better technique and better equipment to getting longer. From the Teddy Bear drill to my new Ping G20 driver, it was a year-long obsession, but Big Bopper is here to stay.
Resolution #2: Enter a hole-in-one million-dollar shootout contest. I totally forgot to do this. Usually, my email in-box is littered with announcements on the local million-dollar shoot-out, but somehow, I managed to miss them. Or maybe the local million-dollar shoot-out contest decided to omit me 'cause they knew I'd win. ;)
Resolution #3: Break 90. Did it. I broke 90 and shot an 87 back in October.
Resolution #4: Join a women’s league. I was still to chicken to sign up for an official women's league, due to my unpredictable work schedule and horror stories about one of the local women's leagues demanding new golfers to "audition" for a spot. However, I did form a league of my own, of sorts, consisting of Seri and Bea and me as a regular threesome, with a field of various players stepping in as the fourth.
Resolution #5: Play another charity tournament. Did it. In fact, I played several charity tournaments this past year. Didn't win any trophies, but I did win prizes for closest-to-the-pin and longest drive.

Okay, so 3 out of 5 ain't bad. How about this year? Here's my new list of resolutions for 2013:

Resolution #1: Get longer. Last year I gained about 30-50 yards in driving distance, with an average drive of 180 and a maximum drive of 230 yards. This year, I want to gain another 10-20. I want to average 200 and achieve a maximum drive of 250 or more. 
Resolution #2: Enter a hole-in-one million-dollar shootout contest. I still want to do this, if I can remember. One of the local golf courses usually sponsors one in July. But please email me if you hear of one.
Resolution #3: Break 80. I hope I can do this, or at least score in the low 90s all the time.
Resolution #4: Join a women’s league. This will have to wait till spring, most likely, as most of the golfy women around here pack the clubs away when the temps fall below 50 degrees. 
Resolution #5: Play another bucket list course. Last year, hubby and I played TPC Sawgrass. It was an awesome experience. This year, some of the possibilities include Torrey Pines and Bandon Dunes. I'm not quite ready for Scotland yet. Maybe in another year.

Now if only the temperature would climb back into the 40s, I could start on my resolutions. So far, 2013 has started with a cold, cloudy winter. But the forecast says a warming trend is in the near future. In the meantime, Ping gifted golfers with another price drop, so I will keep myself busy by trying out those new G20 irons. I'll keep you posted...

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Living in the 80s

To quote that song by Killing Joke, “Ahhhhhhh….. eighties! I’m living in the eighties!”

Yeah, that’s right. I broke 90 and took home a score in the 80s. This happened yesterday at Fox Hollow. I had a 9:56 am tee time with Seri and Bea. They were both running late so we got pushed back a couple of minutes. I waited for them at the starter booth, watching as Seri meandered up from the club house, carrying her thermos of coffee and a giant Styrofoam cup of ice. Bea was still rubbing sleep out of her eyes as she strolled up from the parking lot, carrying her golf bag and a pillow to use as her seat cushion on the golf cart.

Neither of them seemed very excited to play. “Honestly, I don’t like this course. It’s so boring,” Seri said. I was a little insulted, since this is my “home” course. But I knew it was because Seri preferred the city courses, where the “better” golfers play. I looked around at the vibrant fall colors on display and thought Seri must be blind.



On the first hole, Seri landed her approach shot right into a bunker, and I said, “It’s because you said this course is boring. The golf gods are punishing you.” Bea said, “Yeah, they also think you need some bunker practice.” By now, we are familiar enough with each other to give and take a little ribbing.

So the round progressed as usual, with Seri and Bea riding in their golf cart and chatting away in Korean, and me walking solo with my pull-cart. For the most part, I was left out of the conversation, and occasionally I actually felt left out. But mostly, I felt focused on my game. I showed Seri and Bea my new driver and 3-wood, and they oohed and aahed politely. A few weeks ago, Seri told me I don’t need a new driver since I can hit far with my old driver. And by “far,” she meant farther than her. With my new driver, I was hitting a lot farther than her, and I don’t think she liked it one bit. I even hit farther than Bea a few times, but that was because Bea was probably exhausted from staying up late watching Korean soap operas on TV.

While the new driver has given me reliable distance if I can hit it well, I think the club that has really made a difference for me is the 3-wood. I can hit it 160 yards or more, and if I can land the green with it, that can save me from a risky wedge shot. From the new driver and 3-wood, I gained anywhere from 10 to 30 yards combined, and it all added up to a lot more confidence. My irons stayed true, and I parred all the par 3s except one. Even my putter behaved, and while I three-putted 5 times, I one-putted 3 times to help make up for it.

In the end, I shot an 87. This is an all-time low score since I shot a 90. Since that day back in June, I have been dabbling in scores ranging anywhere from the mid-90s to as high as 109. But today, 87 is my lowest score ever. It probably helped that the weather was unseasonably warm, with a high of 82. Yup, the 80s is good all around. And I really hope the eighties is here to stay. Until I break 80. Then it will be all about the seventies. That was a good decade too.


Friday, June 8, 2012

You Never Forget Your First Time

The first time I ever played a full 18 holes, I shot a 128. That was years ago, and I remember thinking how shooting 100 seemed impossible. But I did it. The first time I shot 100 was at The Crossings in Carlsbad, CA. Hubby and I played with a retired man and his middle-aged son, who were very nice, relaxed, chill kind of people. After we were done, a staffer at the golf course asked me how I did, and I said, “I just shot the lowest score of my life.” He looked at me like I must have broken 70 or something. Little did he know that 100 was the lowest score of my life at that time.

Today, 90 is the lowest score of my life. That’s right. I shot a 90 today, all by myself. (The 90 I shot when I played the bramble format at the Martha's Place charity tournament doesn’t count since I was assisted by hubby’s monster driving on some of the holes.) Over the past few months, I have been shooting in the high 90s, and once shot 94, but I was wondering when I would ever shoot lower than that. Turns out today was the day.

The location of this feat was Fox Hollow, which has become my favorite course. It’s where I shot a hole-in-one-last October, on the same day I shot a 99 and first broke 100. And now, it’s where breaking 90 will be my goal. My playing partners were Debbie Harry and Dodi, who are both super laid-back, good vibe kind of people. But out of sheer coincidence, the same OMG from last week joined us. He did some irritating things, including smoking a lot and marking my ball with a wooden tee, without my permission, when I couldn’t get to the green fast enough, but I returned the favor when I took the flag out of the hole on one of his long putts, and he wanted it to stay in (but really, you’re supposed to take the pin out once everyone is on the green anyway).

And, I am not ashamed to admit that I rode a cart today (or “rode the wagon” as Dodi likes to say). It is easier to play golf when sweat isn’t pouring into your eyes. Other thoughts: Driver wasn’t great, but it didn’t suck completely. I have learned when to hit my hybrid and when to leave the 7-wood in the bag. Also, even when I didn’t make greens in regulation, wedging it close to the hole and one-putting is just as good.

Here, for posterity, my scorecard:


In case you're wondering, the numbers in the first row of my scorecard are my "distances from the pin" on each tee shot. I put an X when my drive sucks so bad I don't bother recording it. Later, I subtract this number from the hole's yardage to get an approximation of how far I hit each drive. I put this number on the bottom row. The tick marks in the second row represent each shot I take to get on or near the green, unless it's a par 3 and I can keep track in my head. On par 3s, I also write "on" or "off" or "bunk" to indicate whether I made it on or off the green, or landed in the sand. 

I usually tally the front 9 before proceeding to the back 9, but today, I didn't want to put pressure on myself, so I waited till I got home to add it all up. I was pretty sure I did well (for me) since I didn't have any 8's on my card, and only one 7. 

90 is better than I expected for today. A lot better. I am happy tonight. And I will remember this day for a long time.
 

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Martha’s Place Tournament

The best thing about playing charity golf tournaments is that it makes you feel less guilty about spending four or five hours outside doing something that is ostensibly a rather nonsensical and self-indulgent activity. On Friday, I happened into another charity tournament through my hubby’s work, which was a sponsor for the annual golf outing to benefit Martha’s Place, a residential recovery program for women in Baltimore who are overcoming drug addiction and homelessness. 

The tournament had an 8am shotgun start so we were up at 6am. Luckily the venue was the nearby Pine Ridge GC, or we’d have to wake up even earlier. The format was a bramble, a variant of the scramble in which everyone in the foursome tees off, goes to the best-positioned ball for their second shot, and then plays their own ball from there. Everyone can keep an individual score, but the team score is the lowest individual score on each hole. Mulligans were on sale for $10 each or 3 for $20. We bought 6.

Hubby and I played as a twosome, since a third person who had been paired with us did not show up. At 7:45am, everyone loaded into the golf carts lined up outside the clubhouse, and we listened to the introductory remarks. I scanned the crowd and saw only one or two other women playing the tournament that day, so I figured I had a one-in-three chance to win the women’s long drive, since that was the only individual female category to win.

Not that I counted on it, because I’d been dead-pulling my drive lately. Hubby said I wasn’t extending my arms straight toward the target on the release, but I knew that wasn’t it. Perhaps it was the early morning clarity, but after the second hole, I suddenly realized what it was. In the past few weeks I’d been making an attempt to drive with my arms hanging straight down instead of reaching forward a little bit. I thought keeping my arms closer in to my body would help generate more clubhead speed. But doing this forced me to hinge my wrists more at address, so I was rotating my wrists through impact as if I were holding a jump rope, flicking them left. This caused my tee shots to go straight to the left. But once I realized it, I was able to fix it and my drives straightened out nicely.

In fact, hubby and I ended up using my tee shot as the preferred lie for 11 out of 18 holes that day. The result was a team score of 78, which wasn’t low enough to win the team title. However, I did win the women’s long drive for my tee shot on Hole 6 (the designated hole for the challenge), which rolled a respectable 207 yards on a downhill fairway. And I shot 90 as an individual, which is a new low for me, even though it was mainly due to the bramble format. As a prize, I won two ladies golf shirts, a fleece jacket, and $50 in gift cards.   

At the end of the day, I went home with lots of swag, and just a little less guilt.

Hole 6 at Pine Ridge is a downhill dog-leg right with lots of rightward slope. The trick is to aim left and let your ball go for a ride.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Two Words: Ninety Four

I shot a 94 today!!! Woohoo!!! That is a personal best. I didn’t think this would happen today but it did. It was a perfect spring day, a sunny blue-sky day, with highs in the mid 70s and winds in the 5-10 mph range. I had a 12:04pm tee time at the same course I played last week. There were four of us this time – me, Seri, Bea, and a woman I’ll call Debbie Harry because she’s an older blonde with wavy, sun-bleached hair.

I shared a cart with Debbie Harry, and since she’s a native English speaker like me, I felt free to be chatty. I think I was a little too chatty, though. Debbie is a beginner, and when I saw her struggling on the first hole, I felt compelled to let unsolicited advice bubble forth from my mouth, like magma oozing from a volcano.

I told her to keep her feet closer together and let her arms hand straight down. After she took a practice swing, I said she should try and keep her left arm straight. When I heard her audibly sigh, I caught myself, and said “Okay, enough. I won’t say another word.” Suddenly, I realized why my husband always tried to give me advice when I was first learning golf. I think he really was just trying to help. But golf is an agony that must be suffered alone, so I zipped my lips.

Debbie Harry confessed she’d never heard the left arm straight thing and she’d work on that. For the rest of the round, we chitchatted about other things. And I focused on my own game.

On the front nine, my longer drives allowed me to make greens in regulation. I only three-putted twice and scored a 43, an all-time low for me. I told Seri and Bea that maybe I should ride a cart more often because it seems to conserve energy that I can use for playing.

On the back nine, things were going along in a similar fashion, but on the 14th hole, I suddenly had this feeling that I was missing a club. Although it turned out that I had just returned a club to a different slot in my bag, this wondering about missing clubs prompted Debbie Harry to count her clubs and she realized that she was, in fact, missing a club. Somewhere after the turn, she had forgotten her wedge.

After we teed off on 14, she decided to take the cart and go look for her club. Uncertain which club to use for my second shot, I took my 7-wood, 7-utility, and putter out of my golf bag. I also grabbed my purse, not because I didn’t trust Debbie Harry with it, but because I lived in New York for 10 years and always needing to have my purse within eyeshot is a habit I’m simply unable to quit. (In church, I even take my purse with me to the communion line.)

Even with these important objects in hand, I instantly regretted not bringing along my scorecard too. Because I had shot a record-low 43 on the front half, that scorecard had already become a sentimental treasure to me. Something I would put in a scrapbook (if I had time to scrapbook). I pictured my scorecard clipped precariously to the steering wheel of the cart as Debbie Harry drove away with it. One stiff breeze and that scorecard would be gone with the wind.

Anyway, there I was dragging 3 golf clubs and my Lesportsac handbag along the fairway, hoping that Debbie Harry would find her club pronto and be back in a jif. I took my second shot, which landed in a bunker near the green. Once there, I realized I did not have a sand wedge. Luckily, Bea offered to lend me hers. I noticed that she had a label on her grip, saying “Thumb to the right.” That is so cute, I thought, picturing her typing out little reminders with her P-touch like a Martha Stewart of golf.

After I got out of the sand and landed on the green, I two-putted and scored a bogey on that hole. Debbie Harry finally returned by then, but she still hadn’t found her club. I suggested calling the pro shop since whoever found it would probably send it over to the lost-and-found. She called them, and sure enough, they had her wedge.

And I had my scorecard back in sight. On the 15th hole, I was feeling the pressure to perform, and an off-center drive resulted in my ball landing in some scraggly dirt patch under some trees. It was a terrible, uneven lie, but I gave it a quick punch. The ball moved a few feet to another scraggly dirt patch, and I pounded it out into the fairway. From there, I took a hard whack with my 7-utility, hoping to make it onto the green. Instead, it missed left and landed in some mulchy groundcover on a hill. It took another two shots to get out of there. Then I three-putted. Total for that hole was 9.

Things were not looking great, but I held it together and shot bogey and par on the next two holes. On the 18th hole, I teed off and hit a tree. I thought the ball shot through the branches and would be findable among the dried winter leaves littering the fairway. Once I got there, I could not locate my ball. Seri said she thought it went out of bounds, through the chain-link fence. I saw the group behind us was waiting at the tee ground, so I gave up the search and took a drop below the tree my ball had hit. It took me 8 strokes to hole out, including two self-imposed penalty strokes for losing my ball.

Later, I found out that two strokes was an appropriate penalty, since I should have actually gone back and teed off again, according to Rule 27-1 of the Rules of Golf. If I had followed the rule, the penalty would have been one stroke. Since I breached this rule, the penalty is two strokes. I think this will teach me to always hit a provisional ball if I’m ever in doubt about finding my tee shot.

In the end, I shot a hard-won 94. It could have been worse. But it turned out to be a personal best. Definitely one for the scrapbook.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Winter Round: Signs of Improvement


Last Monday, Seri and I had a noon tee time. I wanted to cancel since there was snow on the ground and the temps were only going to hit 40 degrees with winds in the 10-13 mph range. I had never played in weather below 42, but Seri said she really wanted to play, and I thought, “Wow, this chick’s more hardcore than me!”

It was only 32 degrees when I left the house. I wore two pairs of pants, a turtleneck, a cashmere sweater, a pink fleece pullover, and my orange fleece vest. I also wore a fluffy ivory knit cap my aunt gave me years ago. I think she got it from her former Russian art-dealer boyfriend. It’s the warmest hat I own. With four layers of clothing on and a puffy hat, I felt like a fat clown. Seri was outfitted in a few layers of high-tech cold gear, plus her rasta hat. It was sunny out, and by the third hole, we were sweating.

The ground was hard as a rock and we had a hard time getting tees in the grass. We had to work them in like wooden screws. However, the cold hard fairway sometimes yielded benefits in terms of ball bounce, and I generated three decent drives in the 160-169 range. On a par 5 on the back nine, I lost a ball in a hazard but lucked out because course rules gave a free drop. Somehow I kept my game together. Even though it was below 40, I shot under 100 for the third time in my life. I shot a 98, to be exact. A good feeling, even if I did look like a fat clown.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

First Round of the New Year

To celebrate the arrival of the new year, I made a tee time on January 1, 2012, at 12:12pm. The weather forecast called for sunny skies with a high of 53 degrees, so I wasn’t surprised to find the parking lot half full at the golf course. Good thing there was a football game today, or it would have been packed.

Yesterday was warm too, but I forced myself to take a day off since my neck and hip were feeling a bit achy. Today I felt just fine but resolved to swing easy and not try to kill it on driver. Hubby had the idea to play a match, and he gave me a stroke a hole. So on a par 4, for example, if I took five strokes and he took four, we’d still be even. Just before we teed off, the starter said to me, “Don’t forget the rules: You’re not allowed to beat him!” I laughed and replied, “Don’t worry, that never happens!”

For the first few holes, things went pretty well, which for me means I was staying a stroke or two above par. I landed on the green on hole 5, which was the site of my hole-in-one back in October. I haven’t repeated it since, but that never stops me from trying. This time, I ended up three-putting for a respectable bogey.


Then along came hole 6. From the red tees, it’s 405 yards to the pin, half of which is a steep uphill. I botched my drive and plugged the ball into the rough on the far right, a pitiful 80 yards or so from the tee ground. From there I tried rescuing the ball with my 7-wood, but the rough was thick and the ball was stubborn. I kept hitting fat shots that sent the ball dribbling forward, clinging to the side of the fairway like a gutterball. It took me 11 strokes to get my ball in the hole. Needless to say, hubby won that hole.

Given that I blew up so hard, we had to come up with a new golf term for my terrible score. In golf lingo, there’s bogey and double-bogey for one or two strokes above par. Three strokes over par is triple-bogey, and if par happens to be 5, then you’d get a “snowman,” which is what the 8 looks like. But what about 9, 10, and 11, which are numbers that are known to appear on my score card? Well, I thought of “lollipop” for a 9. For 10, hubby thought “bacon and egg” was a good phrase. And for 11? “Chopsticks,” he said.

On the back nine, the wind picked up and some clouds rolled in, and then raindrops started falling. At the 14th hole, we headed for shelter. We debated stopping for the day, but my husband surveyed the sky and looked at how fast the clouds were moving in the distance. “This should be over in about 20 minutes,” he predicted. So we loitered under the driving range hood till the rain subsided to a light drizzle.


Sometimes I play better in the rain. The grayness forms a cloak around me so I don’t get distracted by pretty blue skies, chirping birds, or shadows cast by the sun. On a wet fairway, balls don’t stray too far from where you land them, and a damp green is like putting on carpet. Perhaps because of this, I birdied the 16th hole. I hit my 6-iron on the 110-yard par 3, and made the 8-foot putt to my utter surprise. 

I shot 103 for the round. Hubby shot an 86. In terms of the match, I won 7 holes, he won 6, and we came out even on the rest. So technically, despite the starter's reminder, I did beat my husband. But we both had fun. Even though there were some dark clouds and cold rain, we weathered it. We even managed not to curse or bicker much. All in all, it was a great start to the new year.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Golf Resolutions for 2012

New Year’s is a time of looking back as well as looking forward. People measure their success by different things – career, relationships, family. I do too, but all of that is way too private to post on the Internet. However, I will gladly share my golf resolutions for all the world to see. Because chances are, only a very few people in the world will actually see them. 

So, without further ado...

Resolution #1: Get longer. In 2011, I got my game back. After months of physical therapy recovering from a neck/back injury, I was finally able to play a full round of golf without worrying if I would hurt myself. I did lose about 20 yards off my driving distance since before my injury, so my resolution for 2012 is to take a few check-up lessons and figure out how to get that distance back.

Resolution #2: Enter a hole-in-one million-dollar shootout contest. In 2011, I actually made a hole-in-one. In 2012, I want to try my luck at a hole-in-one contest. Even though I have heard they use these weird, hard balls that make it next to impossible to get one in the hole, I could use a million bucks, and ya gotta play to win.

Resolution #3: Break 90. Because of the aforementioned hole-in-one, I broke 100 for the first time in 2011. So next year, there’s nowhere to go but down. I vow to break 90. Or at least break 100 consistently.

Resolution #4: Join a women’s league. My husband can only play on weekends and after work in the summer, so I need golfing gals with similar skills to hit the greens on weekdays. In 2011, I found a female golf buddy to play with during the week. In 2012, I hope to find more like-minded women to golf with.

Resolution #5: Play another charity tournament. In 2009, I won the ladies champion trophy at a local charity tournament (the ladies field was a slim half dozen, but still…). I took the year off in 2010 due to “the injury,” but in 2011, I was back on top as the winner of the women’s longest drive (it was only about 160 yds, but still long enough to beat others on that particular hole). In 2012, I would like to add another annual charity tournament to my roster, preferably one with low entry fees and big trophies.

Will I make or break these resolutions? Time will tell. I have to wait for spring or summer to fulfill some of these promises to myself, but I have already taken a step toward Resolution #1 -- I booked a lesson for tomorrow. So we’ll see what’s what. Stay tuned.