Waiting in the car park of Ross on Wye Golf Club at 330am
Saturday 23 June, I began to wonder about the sanity of the task ahead.
It began a few months ago when my friend became Lady Captain
and thought it would be a great idea to play 5 rounds of golf for her chosen
charity, Guide Dogs. Somewhere along the
line 5 rounds changed into 100 holes, as it has a ‘nicer sound about it’! Myself and two other ladies were approached
and asked if we wanted to take on this challenge, bizarrely, we all said yes.
A few weeks ago, we started to think about what we’d
actually said yes to. With little training, except one of us who goes on holiday to walk 130 miles!, I'm sure we were all secretly thinking we might be the weakest link, maybe that’s what
kept us going?
Kerry at silly o'clock |
It was 10 degrees centigrade at 4am, dawn broke with birds
singing their little hearts out, LC took a drive to test the water-no one saw
where it went, so we waited a bit longer, probably about 2 minutes as we were
getting restless and wanting to get on with it. Then
LC took another shot and whether we saw it or not, we were off- in two
balls. Stroke play for a medal is a real
mind game, but as we were pretty buoyant and up for the challenge, no one
really thought about the format, we just did it.
12th hole par 3 |
We played 2 rounds of 18 holes and 4 rounds of 16
holes. After 36 holes, non-stop-mainly
because the club house wasn’t open and wee stops weren’t tempting us away from
our task – why is it when you see a toilet or think about it, you just have to
go? We played 36 holes in 5 hours,
chatting, laughing and generally having a good time; with the odd good shot of
golf thrown in for good measure. The
wonderfully flexibly (and great food too) caterers provided us with
bacon sandwiches after 36 holes, but I was running on adrenaline and really
didn’t feel like it, so halving with my caddy I felt sufficiently nourished, to
be honest though once Id started eating, it hit the spot.
Kerry taking on nourishment and two great caddies Dinah and Mo-nick named DynaMo |
Amanda and Julia (Caddy) |
We were extremely lucky to have a steady stream of caddies to help along the way; supplying their trollies and batteries as needed; although we did sort ourselves out for the first round, as we didn't think it was fair to ask the ladies to do the 4am shift! Tim and his staff in the Pro-shop was amazing, he was supporting and gently reminding people of our challenge.
On the third round we found we were having to share the
course with early bird golfers, or lovingly called ‘the worms’ at Ross
(lovingly as my hubbie is one of them!)
They were fantastic, they stopped what they were doing, stepped aside
and let us play through offering tons of encouragement along the way. There was a real sense of camaraderie, just
as it should be whether its men or women playing, it’s all about supporting
each other and appreciating the task undertaken-those few words of
encouragement go such a long way, and make you feel great and get you ready to
play the next few holes. Some of us- ok
me, performed to an audience of men well – but there was something quite weird
about your husband waving you through whilst he stood aside on the 10th
green on our third round – gladly I didn’t mess up my shot and walked away with
a par, as did my partner.
It’s amazing when you don’t have time to mess about,
thinking about what to do, where to put the shot, which club to play, what’s
for dinner and everything else that goes through your mind when playing golf;
how well one plays.
Another ball away |
My playing partner, Kerry, played out of her skin, she’s a
good golfers anyway (11 handicap) but being an all-round good egg helped too, she
rarely wavered from her goal of getting the job done. It’s a good test of a friendship; you really
need your friends when you take on such a challenge.
left to right: Amanda, Kerry, Me, Helen |
With a spring in our steps we bounced along to the final
hole, where it was decided we’d all tee off at the same time – scary stuff. A bit like at the driving range without the
partitions!
16th/100th hole-final drive in unison |
But we all hit solid golf balls, despite it being our 100th
tee shot, and all landed fairly close to each other with a good second shot to
the green. Naturally we all hit a
different ball, obviously we were very tired, but to have four balls in play,
and in a good position just goes to show how we were enjoying ourselves.
When the final hole had been played there was lots of clapping, kissing and
cheering – it was like playing in a major –what an amazing atmosphere.
Then to the bar..........
Me-Sarah |
Kerry |
Helen |
Some useful stats
With varying handicaps and playing 2 x 18’s and then 4 x 16’s
these are pretty rough stats:
The gross taken ranged from 483 to 553, so we averaged 503
shots per 100 holes each.
Kerry got the best gross score, and I got the best net score.
What is really strange- the gross score for all four of us is 2012
And finally- Amanda (Lady Captain, Ross on Wye GC 2012) |
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