- Media Guide for the ‘Golf Journey to Australia’
- Kel Nagle, Australia’s Legendary Golfer
- Day 48: Sadly, Last Day in Sydney & Australia… Good Bye for Now!
- Day 47: Played the Course Where the Pro’s Played at RACV Royal Pines!
- Day 46: AUS PGA FINAL: Chalmers Beats Scott, Wins Epic 7-Hole Playoff
- Day 46: JPT City Sights Tour of Brisbane
- Day 45: AUS PGA Rd. 3: Adam Scott Strange, aand Ormsby, Leading the Australian PGA
- Day 45: Walking the New Royal Pines Course with its Architect Graham Marsh!
- Day 44: AUS PGA Rd. 2: Adam Scott about to Deliver in Australia!
- Day 43: AUS PGA Rd. 1: ‘Boo-tiful Start to this Aussie Weekley Golf-about!’
- Day 43: Play Royal Queensland GC & Meet Charlie Earp, Greg Norman’s Coach
- Day 42: Intercontinental Sanctuary Cove Resort—Australia’s Gold Coast Standard!!!
- Day 41: DINNER with the STARS at the Australian PGA Championship
- Day 40: Stay & Play Golf at the Palmer Coolum Resort!
- Day 39: Drive from Sunshine Coast to the Gold Coast & the AUS PGA Championship!
- Day 38: Golf Journey to Australia on Sirius PGA TOUR Radio…
- Day 38: A Tale of Two Legends at Chateau Elan & The Vintage!
- Day 37: Richard Mercer, Legendary Golf Instructor in Australia!
- Day 37: The Vintage & Chateau Elan Hunter Valley, Unforgettable, in Every Way…
- Day 36: Drive Sydney to Hunter Valley & Stay at The Vintage!
- Day 35: Enjoyed the Sydney Stormy View & Got a Haircut!
- Day 34: Enjoy the View, Rest & Do Laundry
- Day 33: Play St. Michael’s GC
- Day 32: Phillip Hughes: Australian Batsman Dies, Aged 25
- Day 32: G’day for Spieth Down Under, Record 63 Wins Australian Open!
- Day 31: Attending the Annual Dinner of the Australian Golf Writers’ Association
- Day 31: Rd. 3 AUS Open: All Aussie Show Except for American Jordan Spieth!
- Day 30: Rd. 2 AUS Open: Moving Day a Day Early?
- Day 29: Rd. 1 AUS Open: Rory in the BIG House at The Australian Golf Club
- Day 29: Play Royal Sydney GC
- Day 28: Drive Melbourne to Sydney, Visit Canberra, Australia’s Capital City!!!
- Day 27: Play Metropolitan Golf Club, Host of the 2014 Australian Masters
- Day 26: Play Victoria GC & Attend Golf Society of Australia’s Annual Dinner
- Day 25: AATKings, My Tour Guide in Sydney & Melbourne!
- Day 25: AATKings, My Tour Guide for Magnificent Melbourne!
- Day 25: Calling Nick Cullen, Melbourne’s Metro Masters Man!!!
- Day 24: Round 3: Moving Day at the Metro Masters!
- Day 23: Play Kingston Heath GC, Sandbelt Melbourne Classic Golf
- Day 23: Round 2 AUS Masters: Playing Golf in the Sandbelt Melbourne!
- Day 22: Play Royal Melbourne GC; Sandbelt Melbourne Classic Golf
- Day 22: Round 1 at the Australian Masters at ‘Metro’ in Melbourne!
- Day 21: Play Country Club Tasmania; Fly back to Melbourne
- Day 20: Play Barnbougle Lost Farm; Drive to Launceston & Stay at Country Club Tasmania
- Day 19: Fly Melbourne to Launceston,Tasmania; Stay & Play at Barnbougle Dunes
- Day 18: Play The National Golf Links on the Mornington Peninsula SE of Melbourne
- Day 17: Australian Masters Begins on Thursday, November 20th!!!
- Day 16: Play Tura Beach CC, Stay at Luxury Waterview Apartments
- Day 15: Play Pambula-Merimbula Golf Club, Stay at Luxury Waterview Apartments
- Day 14: Drive Sydney to Marimbula, Stay at Luxury Waterview Apartments
- Day 13: Play The Australian Golf Club in Sydney
- Day 12: Stay at River Oaks Golf Resort & Play Gargurra Course
- Day 11: Stay at Riverside Oaks Golf Resort & Play Bungool Course
- Day 10: Happy 100th Birthday Dan Cullen, Legendary Australian Golfer!
- Day 10: Visit Dan Cullen & Play Bondi Beach Golf & Diggers Club
- Day 9: Play The Lakes Golf Club, Sydney’s Progressive Club!
- Day 8: Play New South Wales GC, Australia’s Golfing Gem Overlooking the Pacific Ocean.
- Day 7: AAT Kings Magical Manly Tour & Captain Cook Lunch Cruise
- Day 6: The Melbourne Cup & Hat Day in Australia!
- Day 5: AATKings Tour of Sydney!
- Day 4: WOW Sydney & Hosting the 2000 Olympics!
- Day 3: First Full Day in Sydney; Visit NSW Golf Club & Sightseeing
- Day 2: Crossing the IDL & Arriving in Sydney (Fri 10/31/14)
- Day 1: Following the Sun West to Honolulu (Wed 10/29/14)
- Day 0: Golf Journey to Australia Begins October 29th!!!
Day 15: Play Pambula-Merimbula Golf Club, Stay at Luxury Waterview Apartments
Day 14: Drive Sydney to Marimbula, Stay at Luxury Waterview Apartments
Day 13: Play The Australian Golf Club in Sydney
Daily Updates from “Down Under” on the “Golf Journey to Australia”
Day 12: Stay at River Oaks Golf Resort & Play Gargurra Course
Day 11: Stay at Riverside Oaks Golf Resort & Play Bungool Course
The Riverside Oaks Golf Resort was the first resort I stayed at in Australia and I could not have picked a better one! The golf was outstanding with the Bob Harrison designed Bungool Course opened just a week earlier and the refurbished Gargurra Course hosting the New South Wales PGA Championship, an event on the Australasia Tour, in a few weeks. The accommodations, only a year old, are first-class, very comfortable and so close to the golf you can drop a golf ball and it will roll down the hill to the first tee of the Gargurra Course. Proclaimed as Sydney’s only 36 hole championship golf resort, this is the one for Australians to revisit again and for International golf travelers to visit for sure if anywhere near Sydney.
The ‘staying and playing’ experience at any resort is only as good as its owners and investors and their plans for the future. In late 2009 it was announced that China’s Nanshan Group was buying the Riverside Oaks property. They are one of China’s top 500 companies and also own Mission Hills, the world’s largest golf facility with twelve golf courses that has hosted World Cup competitions. Their plans to invest in accommodations and a second golf course have all come to fruition. Riverside Oaks is their Australian flagship property and is the training base for the Chinese National Squad (whose Olympic Team is being coached by Australian Greg Norman). Kenneth Chan is the General Manager. After meeting and conversing with Ken there is no doubt in my mind that even bigger and better days are ahead for the Riverside Oaks Golf Resort. The three days and two nights I spent there were big and better already and I now know that golf resorts in Australia are on par or better than their famous golf courses and other resorts around the world!
CLICK here for VIDEO INTERVIEW with David Scott, Deputy Manager of the Riverside Oaks Golf Resort.

With Golf Course Superintendent Glenn Gibson-Smith (L) and Deputy Manager David Scott (R). Two A-Plus golfers on the team at Riverside Oaks Golf Resort.
More specifically, the ‘staying and playing’ experience at any resort is only as good as its day-to-day management team and support staff. David Scott is no Deputy Barney Fife! Here’s a young buck, former professional golfer with a passion and all the energy in the world to make your stay at Riverside Oaks memorable, engaging and fun or whatever you want it to be. I loved the part of the interview where he says his wife gave him a nudge. Yes, this is a remote resort (it’s 60 km from the heart of the Sydney CBD), an hour from Sydney in the middle of nowhere but that is the point. Their is a peacefulness aside a lazy, though powerful, and magnificent Hawkesbury River. A quietness where you can hear yourself exhale and say “this is good’ and hear the putt drop and clink into the cup. It is all about the golf and a relaxing resort experience with friends and family!
Being one of the first to play the new Bungool course was exciting and invigorating. The course is in great condition for being one week old, sort of like that newborn baby getting quickly cleaned up and placed on a mother’s bosom. This baby is perfect and will grow into being a perfect adult golf course someday soon. I sort of laughed as I arrived to find a member sharing his challenging experience of playing Bungool for the first time—difficult lies, deep rough in places (baby needs first hair cut but don’t you dare cut that beautiful hair), and new putting lines that need more expertise than perhaps even some of the pros that will be playing her sister course in the NSW PGA have the ability to read. I felt like I was at home at The Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass. No one said life or golf was suppose to be easy all the time!
I love how Harrison takes you out and around over the first three holes and then back within that outline for holes 4 and 5 before taking you to the far end of the layout on the tenth green before bringing you back home. Sort of a links design with a twist to bring you to your senses in a secure, safe enclave early on in your round.
The kangaroos, my God, the kangaroos! So many, yet quite well behaved and as mindful of any gallery of patrons I have see at the Masters. Though it took me a few holes to get comfortable playing in front of a gallery and not being fearful of an errant shot hitting poor little Joey or his sibling or mom or dad. No worries, it is a beautiful experience playing alongside the Hawkesbury River and in front of countless interested marsupials!
I scored high on the Bungool but went low (for me) on the Gargurra Course sinking a 30-footer for birdie at the last and posting a 78. No worries, no thoughts of sticking around for Stage 1 of Q-School that begins at Riverside Oaks on December 17th. Though I do think that would be the ultimate story—to be fitted with the best technology, coached by the best instructors and see what the best can be for my golf game.
CLICK here for A VIDEO INTERVIEW with Golf Course Superintendent Glenn Gibson-Smith.
It is always exciting to play on a golf course that professional golfers play and compete on for important titles, especially immediately before and after those competitions. Glenn came out to say hello to me on the second green. Here’s another person at Riverside Oaks with game. I liked his comment of “being stuck in the game ever since (my dad put a club in my hands at age 9). I wish I could one day say what he said, “playing off scratch at the moment.” Here’s a superintendent that knows what needs to be done course wise even before the golfers do. Only a recent addition to the Riverside Oaks team, with a plan in place for both the new (Bungool) and the old (Gargurra) there is no doubt in my mind that theses two golf courses will become the best conditioned in the Sydney area within a year or too. From my amateurish perspective I think they are pretty much there already. Kangaroos and a 78 I tell you!

With Chris Fox, learning the PLANEPUTT system of putting. My eyes haven’t seen the reality of my putting stroke until this day!
As I mentioned above I welcome golf instruction at any time but did not realize on the way out to Riverside Oaks I would find some there. I met Chris Fox, a PGA Professional, upon arrival to Riverside Oaks. In fact, it was he that was so gracefully and sympathetically listening to a member’s woes after playing Bungool. He is a putting coach and has developed the PLANEPUTT system and trainer. He has worked with Sydneysider Matt Jones who won the the 2014 Shell Houston Open with a chip in to defeat Matt Kuchar in a playoff. I guess if you have confidence in your putting you can be aggressive with your chipping.
Chris came back in the next day, his day off, to explain the PLANEPUTT system to me and to play the latest new nine on Bungool. In reality, putting is all about angles, planes and the inherent deception our eyes see and our brains translate for us. Chris’s system is a way to separate the facts from the myths while actually putting and getting a feel for the correct putting stroke. Not only did he give me some great putting advice (maybe I should stay for Q-School? NOT!) but gave me a tip on my grip that will change my golf game for the rest of my life. In a nice way, sincerely and honestly he told me not one professional golfer has a grip like mine with an exposed left thumb. He showed me the proper position for my hands to be in. It felt funny at first and still does occasionally but the results are there. A simple and correct grip leads to a simpler swing which leads to solid contact and straight ball flight. Hey maybe 78 is not my best score. THANK YOU Chris Fox, a consummate golf professional, who loves golf, people and sharing his knowledge and exuberance of the game! You can tell that by playing golf with his 7-year old son Ty, what a joy!
Reminiscing a bit, back to Day 11, staying at my first golf resort in Australia. Riverside Oaks Golf Resort is impressive with the new Bungool Course and the Gargurra Course, which is hosting the NSW PGA Championship this week. (Facebook Link, Andy Reistetter, 12/1/14)
Here are a few more pictures that tell the story of my memorable ‘stay and play’ time at Riverside Oaks Golf Resort:

View from my room. Definitely a plus to stay on course and be able to drive your golf cart to the room.

Another of my friends. Wanted to offer him a club and ball to play along but I was afraid he would accept the invitation and beat me!
Day 10: Happy 100th Birthday Dan Cullen, Legendary Australian Golfer!
CLICK here for VIDEO INTERVIEW with Dan Cullen, Legendary Australian Golfer.
You meet the nicest people at golf clubs in Australia! Dan Cullen Jr. was one of those I met at New South Wales Golf Club. Then you meet their father, who happens to be celebrating his 100th birthday, and then his devoted daughter Marianne and then an admiring neighbor Vally May comes over with a birthday card for the man that helped her lower her handicap from 27 to 16 (and she is still smiling about that). Next thing you know you feel part of a great family celebrating life in its purest sense with simple humility and gratitude and you feel what must be that special sense of what it means to be an Australian—today and 100 years ago.
I have been inspired by some great people in the game of golf, beginning with my father who came to golf as a caddie at Scranton CC soon after the depression hit, my older brother L.P., a Cornell educated golf course architect and park designer, many professional golfers growing up through television and now in person, Dick Donovan, the renowned bibliographer of golf books and the written word, the hickory club restoration expert Harry Horton and many, many, many others in golf—the game and the business.

Dan Cullen with his still happy golfing student Vally May delivering his 100th birthday card. You meet friends for life in golf.
Dan Cullen, Sr., the Centenarian, impacted my life and inspired me in all of two hours time that I visited with him and his daughter Marianne. If you ask me what I want to do for “the rest of my life,” my reply will be “I want to be like Dan Cullen.” As much for his longevity, golfing prowess, and his patriotism; but more for his love of life, family and his attitude and perspective on all of the above and what is beyond in the ultimate home hole for all of us. I conversed with a 100-year old man who has the spirit of a 40-year old man. I once read somewhere that every 40-year old man needs an 80-year old man for a friend and vice versa. That goes for a 55-year old and 100-year old youngsters too! Well anyone can benefit from knowing or meeting Dan Cullen. What a joy our visit together was!
Not only did Dan celebrate his 100th birthday on November 14th, he and his wife Enid celebrated their 74th wedding anniversary on the very same day! A picture of them together in their younger days hangs with a clothes pin nearby Dan and tells you all you need to know of their love affair. Obviously meeting their son Dan and daughter Marianne does tell you more—two of the nicest people I have ever met in my life.
Dan’s story is a simple one in life made simple by how he followed his heart and his God-given abilities. He inadvertently came to golf tending to horses as a kid in bushland outside of Perth. He would watch them in a field for a shilling while their riders went nearby to have lunch. The riders turned out to be landowners who were building a golf course. Dan became a caddie, learned of and developed his golfing skills to twice reach the height of being the Western Australia Amateur Champion. Bobby Locke came along and suggested he go to the east coast of Australia where golf was more prevalent and the opportunities greater. There was also another reason for the move, to follow his girlfriend Enid whose family was relocating east to become Sydneysiders. They were married and then the Australian Air Force called him into service in WWII. His bravery and success as a bomber pilot are well documented.
I asked him if Bobby Locke really hooked his putts and his reply was “I don’t think so, he just rolled them in (to the hole).”
He took a bold move in his mid fifties which would set the course and be the foundation for another legendary accomplishment. He saw the need for and took the risk of opening up the Cullens Golf Range adjacent to St. Michael’s Golf Club and not far (maybe a driver) from the New South Wales Golf Club. Before that Dan and other club PGA golf professionals would instruct their students out on the first fairway dodging errant tee shots from other members more in need of their services. With excellent practice facilities and interactive instruction with students like Vally May, Dan’s golf game progressed to a new plateau. He would become an inaugural member of the Australian PGA’s Senior Circuit. He traveled to Great Britain for competition and an opportunity to qualify for the British Open. He did so thus becoming the oldest to ever qualify for the British Open at age 64.
Mr. Cullen felt at home on the driving range and his objective in anyone’s first lesson was to “get to know then a little, be a bit friendly.” He wanted people to be comfortable and believed that “golf is easy, it is not hard. If you get people relaxed and they think golf is playable. They don’t know what they can do with a golf club.” Dan’s job was to help them discover what they could do with a golf club and how much fun they could have doing it!
Five years later, after retiring at age 95 and selling the driving range, that is still called Cullens Golf Range, Dan Cullen is still practicing what he preached, only now out of a recliner in his living room, with a smile and the confidence of knowing he lived life to its fullest. He is a shining example of what life and the game of golf are all about.
Happy Birthday Dan Cullen and wishing you many, many more!
Day 10: Visit Dan Cullen & Play Bondi Beach Golf & Diggers Club
Day 9: Play The Lakes Golf Club, Sydney’s Progressive Club!
When you arrive at The Lakes Golf Club, you are greeted with the words “THIS IS THE LAKES, Be Brave, Be True, Be Strong.” The words are inscribed on the prominently placed “Defining Moment” statue, the upper torso of a male golfer shortly after impact. I don’t have the build, muscles or swing of that gifted, glorious golfer but I was brave, true and strong as I walked the lovely links amidst the lakes with club member Dan Wathen. My lasting memory of the golf I played today will be the driver, 3-wood to 25 feet and the ball disappearing into the cup on the 14th hole for an eagle. The same hole that Greg Norman once took an eleven on in the self-generated heat of competition. But golfing legacies are made over careers not a single hole and the model for the “Defining Moment” statue could be Greg Norman, not Andy Reistetter. But I did have my defining moment for sure on the 14th.
CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW and course tour with Darren Walthen.
Darren has to be the nicest guy ever to walk and play a round of golf with. Watch the video and you will see—knowledgeable, honest and friendly for sure. Insightful too as he said that he “fell in love with the game, challenged myself and here I am twenty years later and still trying to beat myself.” Isn’t that the game of golf we all love in the simplest of terms? The course tour and associated stories goes on and on starting with his prophetic words on the first tee to expect to dunk three to six balls in them there thirsty lakes. Stories about Adam Scott, Tiger Woods and Greg Norman stories all from times The Lakes GC hosted the Australian Open for three consecutive years before Royal Sydney last year and The Australian this year. A rota of four historic golf courses hosting the Open are emerging with the fourth being New South Wales Golf Club where Adam Scott won for the first time in Austral
Day 8: Play New South Wales GC, Australia’s Golfing Gem Overlooking the Pacific Ocean.
Today marked a very special day in the “Golf Journey to Australia,” I played my first round of golf “Down Under.” I could not have been invited to play a better, more inspirational, or more meaningful golf course historically or to me personally. While Aboriginal Australians were the first to live on this island continent, the British were the first from Europe to officially claim area on the Australian mainland. That occurred as a result of Captain James Cook’s arrival in 1770 on the Endeavour, landing in Botany Bay and coming ashore and finding fresh water not far from the 16th tee of the New South Wales Golf Club. What a thrill to put a peg in the ground with Club Captain Phil Banister and a number of other NSWGC members. Playing this seaside links course, an Alister MacKenzie original, that dates back to 1928, was as fitting a beginning to my journey as Cook’s discovery was to end his. I think I must have been as excited as he to discover and walk upon such a beautiful piece of land.
CLICK here for a BEAUTY VIDEO of the New South Wales Golf Club.

The 5th green in the foreground and the island rock outcrop which is a part of the Cape Banks Aquatic Reserve.
Each hole of the NSWGC is unique and memorable. Mackenzie died six years after the golf course opened but he praised it in Golf Illustrated with the following words: “At Sydney , I made an entirely new course for the New South Wales Golf Club at a place called La Perouse. This is a sand duned peninsula which overlooks Botany Bay and presents, I think, more spectacular views than any other place I know with the possible exception of the new Cypress Point golf course I am doing on the Del Monte peninsula in California.” I laughed when Ron, an Aussie turned American CEO and now again a retired Aussie, commented that “Cypress Point isn’t windy enough.” That was before the round. I wholeheartedly agreed after the round.
Eric Apperly, who won the Australian Amateur in 1920, continued along the lines of MacKenzie’s grand vision with alterations in 1932 and then again with a restoration in 1949 after the course had been converted to a military function in WWII. In the first ten year’s of the club’s history, MacKenzie and Apperly, fashioned the golf course pretty much as it is today, 76 years later, and I had the privilege to play that golf course on a beautiful day. It was an extraordinary walk!
How unique and amazing are the 18 holes of this La Perouse Pulchritude? Let me count the ways! All four par-3s point in a different direction as do all four of the par-5s. This superb design feature maximizes the effect of the wind and along with an up-and-down routing amongst the outback-like terrain greatly that confuses the golfer, any golfer, professional or mere amateur. The first four holes are an interesting warm-up to a blind walk up the 5th fairway (see video above) in search of the golfer’s second shot. Once over the ridge one sees the ocean and then after completing the now downhill par-5 one walks across a narrow bridge to the 6th tee placed on a rocky outcrop that doomed the SS Minmi in 1937. Remnants of her 1455 displaced tons are still there wanting to fill your mind and wreck your tee shot. There you have the Gem of Australia Golf—links, seaside, wind—and you have her for the remaining 13 holes. If you are lucky enough to survive the test, you can hear the bell of the SS Minmi ring your drink or dinner order is ready in the Clubhouse lounge overlooking the 18th green. I had the pleasure of seeing and interacting with all of her today!
CLICK here for a VIDEO INTERVIEW with Club Captain Phil Banister.

It was an honor and a privilege to join in with the regular Thursday member competition. Phil is in the checkered sweater at the head of the table.
Club Captain Phil Banister hosted my visit to New South Wales GC and I was warmly greeted by countless members, Golf Manager Brett Folkes and General Manager David Burton. Folkes played collegiate golf in the United States on a golf scholarship from Georgia Southern University, pursued a professional golfing career, and worked in junior golf in the States before recently returning home to Australia. Burton is the consummate professional in the golf club business and is a past president of Golf Management Australia (GMA). Phil, not only was a great host at the club but offered me a room, if needed, to stay in when my first week accommodation was still in question. An affable guy, there is no wonder why he has been elected and has captained the club for the last three years. A lover of the game, the club and all things Australian, he reminded me of Adam’s Scott‘s pivotal win at New South Wales GC in the 2009 Australian Open. It was his first career victory in Australia and from there he went on to become the first Aussie to win the Masters in 2013.
If you ever get the chance to play the New South Wales Golf Club, I would highly recommend that you do so. Its history and place in the game of golf is unique and unmatched. Whether it is your first round of golf in Australia or the last round of golf you play in your lifetime, it will be eternally memorable. It is for me!
Stunning first round of golf in Australia at the New South Wales Golf Club… (Facebook Link, Andy Reistetter, 11/10/14)

Member Glen Martin pointing to the wreckage of the SS Minmi. He has watched it slowly deteriorate and fade from existence his whole life through.




























