JTOG Day 1: Farewell Gathering at TPC Sawgrass

Day 1 of the ‘Journey to Olympic Golf (JTOG).’

The day was Friday, October 11th, 2013 and it would be the last day I would be home in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida for the next four months. So it was a day of final preparations and an evening to say farewell to friends at Nineteen in the Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass.

Of course I was dressed in my best Vecci knickers and toting a set of authentic hickory-shafted clubs to raffle off to get The First Tee fundraising started. It was a good night with several surprises and a lot of fun as I remember it now 1-1/2 years later.

The first surprise was meeting Calvin Peete, the 12-time PGA TOUR winner, including the 1995 PLAYERS Champion. He was engaging, humble and very interesting as was his friend Arthur Johnson. Afterwards we went out to the back of the practice range where he hit the golf ball with a hickory-shafted golf club for the first time! If you click on the above link it will take you to our video interviews.

Another surprise was being unveiled by General Manager Bill Hughes. He is a great guy and the heart and soul of TPC Sawgrass and by extension the PGA TOUR and the entire TPC network of golf clubs. If you ever get the chance to met him or hear him speak you will know what I am talking about. That was a fun time!

TPC Sawgrass Farewell for Journey To Olympic Golf

Check out the  videos in the link above to see the unveiling of me and the JTOG by Bill Hughes and the drawing for the set of hickory clubs won by Kerrie Lecker!

Early the next morning, Torch, a.k.a. my Olympic Torch, a 1992 M30 Infiniti convertible and me would begin the “Journey to Olympic Golf.”

I am looking for 100 new friends in the next 100 days to make a $100 donation (or any amount that you are able to make) to The First Tee. Each day I will be reliving the original “Journey to Olympic Golf” and hope to find a new friend in golf. Is that you? Please join me in giving back to the game we all love.

CLICK here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Please select ‘Andy Reistetter’s Journey to Olympic Golf’ on the drop-down menu for the question ‘What inspired you to make a gift today? This is for tracking purposes only, Andy does not receive any part of your donation or anything financially from The First Tee organization.

There are interesting incentives for making your donation to the First Tee…

PLEASE click here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Thank You!

With Calvin Peete (L) and his good friend Arthur Johnson (R).

With Calvin Peete (L) and his good friend Arthur Johnson (R).

Kerrie Lecker with her daughters taking delivery of her old set of hickories.

Kerrie Lecker with her daughters taking delivery of her old set of hickories.

Torch and I were ready for the "Journey to Olympic Golf" after a great farewell at TPC Sawgrass.

Torch and I were ready for the “Journey to Olympic Golf” after a great farewell at TPC Sawgrass.

 

BLOG Update- Friday, 10/11/13 Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

Friday, October 11th, 11:17 am Home in Creative Condo, Ponte Vedra Beach, FLI am excited to be going to TPC 19 Happy Hour this evening to interview Calvin Peete, winner of 12 PGA TOUR events, including the 1985 THE PLAYERS Championship, and say good bye for a while to my friends here in Ponte Vedra Beach. The highlight of the evening is a drawing for a set of hickory clubs for all who have donate to The First Tee. The goal of the “Journey to Olympic Golf” is to raise $100,000 for the First Tee. Please support this cause if you can!

CLICK here to donate to The First Tee!

Atlanta JTOG all set up! Plans could not have worked out better. Focus in Atlanta is to capture the Olympic Spirit from the 1996 Summer Olympics and the great golfer Bobby Jones. I drive up to Atlanta tomorrow Saturday morning and am staying two nights with a former Olympian. On the schedule are visits to Centennial Olympic Park with the Torch, Bobby Jones gravesite at Historic Oakland Cemetary and Eastlake Golf Club. We are meeting with a group of former Olympians Saturday night and Sunday we are playing Atlanta Athletic Club, home club along with Eastlake to Bobby Jones and where Keegan Bradley won the 2011 PGA Championship. What a great start to the “Journey to Olympic Golf.”

Melissa was an awesome help picking out my new Canon Power Shot SX280HS camera!

Melissa was an awesome help picking out my new Canon Power Shot SX280HS camera!

I love my new Canon Power Shot SX280 HS camera! Thanks Melissa and Best Buy!

On Monday morning I leave for St. Louis playing Glen Echo CC with my hickory sticks. That is golf was last played in the Olympics in 1904.

JTOG: Incentives by Andy to You for Donating to The First Tee…

CLICK here to make a donation to The First Tee.

My goal is to raise $100,000 for The First Tee. I need your help!

I am looking for 100 new friends in the next 100 days to make a $100 donation (or any amount that you are able to make) to The First Tee. Each day I will be reliving the original “Journey to Olympic Golf” and hope to find a new friend in golf. Is that you?

I appreciate your help and will do the following for your donation:

For a $100 donation to The First Tee:

Publish 100 of your words and one picture on Andy’s Golf & Travel Diary about what golf has meant to you and your thoughts on what defines the “Spirit of Olympic Golf.” These 100 words can be anonymous or they can be personalized to remember someone or something  in your life that means a great deal to you. Your name will be entered into a drawing at the end of the 100 days. The lucky winner will receive a set of authentic, professionally restored, nearly 100-year old hickory-shafted golf clubs.

For a $1,000 donation to The First Tee:

In addition to the above, your name will be entered into a drawing with like donators at the end of the 100 days. The lucky winner and their guest will receive four nights lodging in my home in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. My home is a small, one-bedroom creative condo, so I will plan not be here when you and your guest visit. In addition, the lucky winner can select and keep one hickory-shafted golf club and one golf book from a selection of my collection.

For a $10,000 donation to The First Tee:

In addition to the above, your name will not be entered into a drawing. You are already the lucky winner! Here is what you get: the 100 words and one picture publishing (if you like or all donations can be kept confidential and anonymous); a set of authentic, professionally restored, nearly 100-year old hickory-shafted golf clubs; the four nights of lodging; the golf book AND ONE WEEK OF ME! That’s right, 40 documented hours of me writing for you. Here is the chance to get organized, lay out that book you have been meaning to write and get started writing! Reasonable substitutions are allowed. I always wanted to be your butler a la Seinfeld! How can you beat a deal like that?

CLICK here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Please select ‘Andy Reistetter’s Journey to Olympic Golf’ on the drop-down menu for the question ‘What inspired you to make a gift today? This is for tracking purposes only, Andy does not receive any part of your donation or anything financially from The First Tee organization.

PLEASE click here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Thank You!

JTOG: The Genesis of the “Journey to Olympic Golf”…

CLICK here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Everything starts with something.

'Torch' (1992 Infiniti) and my 'Journey to Olympic Golf' began with a farewell party at TPC Sawgrass.

‘Torch’ (1992 Infiniti) and my ‘Journey to Olympic Golf’ began with a farewell party at TPC Sawgrass.

Even something as crazy as hopping in your old 1992 Infiniti convertible and driving down through Mexico and Central America to Panama City, Panama. Then ditching (donating) the car and bopping around South America to Colombia, Peru, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay and finally Brazil in search of the new Olympic Golf Course, reportedly under construction. As crazy as it sounds that is exactly what I did on a wing and a prayer, as they say, starting back in October 2013.

Looking back there were three experiences that came together in my mind, that inspired me and made it my destiny to complete such a bizarre odyssey. Someone I came to know had done something equally outlandish and comical, the trees at Augusta National Golf Course gesticulated that I do so and I actually had one sane and logical thought since I left Corporate America seven years ago. And there you have the genesis for embarking on the “Journey to Olympic Golf.”

There are a lot of interesting people in the golf business. Some out in front of the camera and lots more behind the camera or wandering around the PGA Show in Orlando or outside the ropes out on tour. I was fortunate to meet one of the most interesting of them all—David Wood. A former stand-up comedian, you might have seen him on the David Letterman Show way back when. While I love a good laugh (and gave it a go myself once as a stand-up comedian and failed twice), that is not what inspired me about David.

David Wood and his book 'Around the World in 80 Rounds' inspired me to do the 'Journey to Olympic Golf.' Photo Credit: Amazon.com

David Wood and his book ‘Around the World in 80 Rounds’ inspired me to do the ‘Journey to Olympic Golf.’ Photo Credit: Amazon.com

The first paragraph on the front flap of his book Around the World in 80 Rounds tells the  whole story of how he inspired me: “At forty-seven David Wood sold everything he owned and set out to fulfill every golfer’s dream: For one year, he traveled the world (covering sixty thousand miles and every continent except Antarctica) by plane, boat, train, motorcycle, and rickshaw, to play the game he loves in the most exotic locales, including the world’s highest, driest, hottest, coldest, and most remote golf courses, and lived to tell the tale.”

I wanted to be like David, not Letterman, but the other one—David Wood!

In a coincidental manner, someone you all probably know, if you follow golf and the business of golf whether it be the LPGA then or the PGA TOUR now, planted the Olympic Golf seed in me one night, not far from my home.

I had heard of the World Junior Golf Series (WGJS) and a “Mom & Coach Changing Junior Golf Around the World.” The WJGS came to Ponte Vedra in December 2011 and was personally hosted by Herb Peyton,  at his world class Ponte Vedra Inn & Club Beach Resort. Peyton, a larger-than-life figure in the Jacksonville area and nearly 80 years old at the time briefly addressed the youngsters at the Opening Ceremonies. In his youthful manner, the founder of Gate Petroleum pointed out that the juniors’ golf game may be better that his but there was one talent he had that they did not possess. He then demonstrated that talent by “whistling without moving his mouth” much to the delight and amusement of the youngsters.

But it was the man that followed him, The PGA TOUR’s Ty Votaw and his keynote speech at the Opening Ceremony that brought Olympic Golf and what it means into my mind. Votaw is the person who led an international delegation that gained consensus to get golf back in the Olympics in 2016 in Rio de Janiero and then again in 2020. The last time golf was in the world’s biggest athletic event was 112 years ago in 1904 in St. Louis at Glen Echo CC.

Great players like Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Tom Watson and Greg Norman did not have an opportunity to play golf in the Olympics. Ironically, as Votaw pointed out, 77 players competed back in 1904 in St. Louis, 74 from the U.S.A. and 3 from Canada and a Canadian George Lyon won. Votaw looked out over the sea of young faces and wondered aloud who in the room would aspire, prepare and participate in the Olympics perhaps in 2016 but more likely in 2020?

Ty Votaw's keynote speech at the WJGS Opening Ceremony in December 2011 Inspired me to take the 'Journey to Olympic Golf.' Photo Credit: Google Images

Ty Votaw’s keynote speech at the WJGS Opening Ceremony in December 2011 Inspired me to take the ‘Journey to Olympic Golf.’ Photo Credit: Google Images

He seemed to be talking to me, not as a golfer, but as someone who likes to experience golf history in-the-making, especially inspirational golf history in-the-making. In reality, no one alive on Earth has ever experienced Olympic Golf or even had a recent conversation with someone who had. Lyon had lived to be 79 and died in 1938. That night I began to think about what will define the Olympic Spirit of Golf to a new generation and future generations.

With the seed now planted, the water and fertilizer came later the next Spring at the inspirational home of golf—the Augusta National Golf Club and the 2012 Masters Tournament. It was my fourth Masters being there the whole week, sun up to sun down. It was also the third year that the Asia-Pacific Amateur Champion was given an invitation to compete in the Bobby Jones and Clifford Roberts created major. Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama was back for his second consecutive year and won the Silver Cup, which is presented to the lowest scoring amateur. The next year China’s Guan Tianlang at age 14 years, 5 months and 18 days became the youngest ever to make the cut on the PGA TOUR and in a major championship. The next year after that, in 2014, junior golfers, ages 7 to 15, would be playing golf, albeit only on the Tournament Practice Range and the 18th green, at Augusta National Golf Club in the Drive, Chip & Putt Championship. This year Latin America Amateur Champion Matías Domínguez  competed in the Masters. Now every year an amateur from Asia-Pacific and one from Latin America will be playing in The Masters.

The point being, the Augusta National Golf Club along with golf’s major governing bodies are intent on growing the game of golf around the world. Golf is a world-wide sport soon to become an Olympic sport. It was in this spirit that I found myself walking up from the 7th green through the vast parkland area, that used to be the original practice area, towards the clubhouse. I noticed the tall pine trees swaying in the wind. Their movement was almost as if the giant inspirations in my life were walking along with me, waving hello and encouraging me to continue walking down this path of golf voyaging and inspiration-seeking. I thought of my mother and father who passed in their mid-seventies and how short life itself really is. Life is for the living and each day alive is precious.

I have had some inspirational thoughts under the oak tree at Augusta National GC but none better than to embark on the 'Journey to Olympic Golf.'

I have had some inspirational thoughts under the oak tree at Augusta National GC but none better than to embark on the ‘Journey to Olympic Golf.’

I walked along as if mesmerized and made it up to the oak tree that gracefully adorns the clubhouse. I turned around to see all the grace and beauty of the property that Bobby Jones and Clifford Roberts must have seen when they first laid eyes upon it. I knew then that knowing the possibilities of golf travel that David Wood had demonstrated, the vision of Olympic Golf and the answer to a simple question, there was one thing I needed to do.

The simple question was “What will be the biggest thing to happen in the game of golf in the next ten years?” The simple answer is “inclusion in the 2016 Summer Olympics.” This is a new era and a different world full of different people than a century ago in 1904. What was nice back then, but did not ignite anything significant at the time, may be the right catalyst now. This could be golf’s biggest opportunity to become the beloved sport of the world. And beyond that, because golf is a lot like life, who knows what can happen?

That one thing for me to do was to journey from where Olympic Golf was played in 1904 at Glen Echo CC outside of St. Louis to where it is going to be played in the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. I heard they were going to be building a new Olympic Golf Course there. Maybe I could visit Olympic cities along the way, extract the Olympic Spirit and combine it with the history and traditions of golf and discover the Olympic Spirit of Golf. Of course, only the 60 women and 60 men golfers that will be competing in Rio will experience playing Olympic Golf. Maybe they will need a writer to clarify their thoughts?

Little did I know that the “Journey to Olympic Golf” would take 100-days traveling through 14 countries and total 18,471 miles in the winter of 2013/2014.

I will be reliving those “100 Days of the Journey to Olympic Golf” beginning on Monday, April 27th, starting the dialogue on what exactly is the Olympic Spirit of Golf, and raising $100,000 for The First Tee. The reliving of the 100 days will end on Wednesday, August 5th exactly one year prior to the Opening Ceremonies of the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

This is going to be fun!

I am looking for 100 new friends in the next 100 days to make a $100 donation (or any amount that you are able to make) to The First Tee. Each day I will be reliving the original “Journey to Olympic Golf” and hope to find a new friend in golf. Is that you? Please join me in giving back to the game we all love.

CLICK here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Please select ‘Andy Reistetter’s Journey to Olympic Golf’ on the drop-down menu for the question ‘What inspired you to make a gift today? This is for tracking purposes only, Andy does not receive any part of your donation or anything financially from The First Tee organization.

There are interesting incentives for making your donation to the First Tee…

PLEASE click here to make a donation to The First Tee.

Thank You!

 

 

 

 

 

Bess Turk, Woman Golf Spiritualist

CLICK here for VIDEO Interview with Bess Turk, Woman Golf Spiritualist.

CLICK here for Spiritual Golf, Fairway to Heaven, Golf in the Scottish Kingdom

The purpose of this programme is to expand our mastery and enjoyment of the game at whatever level we play. Ultimately, the way we play golf, like any other sport, is about our relationship to ourselves – seeking to enhance our understanding of life and reaching our potential.

Throughout the week, we learn about the ‘inner game’ – gaining insight into our playing strengths that ultimately bring us to our desired level.

The ‘inner game’ is about what goes on beneath the surface – our mental and emotional states not visible to someone watching. Often we may not be aware of them ourselves. Paying clear attention to our ‘inner states’ and external surroundings help us play more rewarding golf.

We work with techniques and approaches that enhance the way we play and enjoy the game.

There is a growing interest worldwide in a more ‘spiritual’ approach to golf, from the rise of Tiger Woods practising meditation and coming from a Buddhist background, to other golf professionals who embrace another dimension of the game beyond the purely technical.

More videos, pictures, & posts coming… what would you like me to write about?

Calvin Peete, 1985 PLAYERS Champion

I sat down and interviewed Calvin Peete on the terrace of the Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass, Home of THE PLAYERS Championship and Mr. Peete’s biggest victory in the his professional golf career. He was engaging, humble and very interesting. Afterwards we went out to the back of the practice range where he hit the golf ball with a hickory-shafted golf club for the first time!

CLICK here for VIDEO Interview with Calvin Peete (Part 1).

CLICK here for VIDEO Interview with Calvin Peete (Part 2)

More videos, pictures, & posts coming… what would you like me to write about?

 

 

 

Jennifer Salles-Cunha with an Olympic Swimmer Perspective

CLICK here to see video of Jennifer Salles-Cunha Interview

Andy Reistetter interviewing Jennifer Salles-Cunha.

Andy Reistetter interviewing Jennifer Salles-Cunha.

I have always said Ponte Vedra Beach is the World Capital of Golf with the PGA TOUR headquartered here, THE PLAYERS and the nearby World Golf Hall of Fame. I thought I needed to go on a 13,000 mile journey to define the ‘Olympic Spirit for Golfers’ when in reality it has been in my own back yard. Along with recent experiences, the HEAL and First Tee events at the Clubhouse and being with Mike Reeder, ParaOlympic To Be Golfer Extraordinarie at Sawgrass CC I had an opportunity to interview Jennifer Salles-Cunha who brought an insightful look at what it takes to be an Olympic swimmer.

Connections between golf and swimming? Why not? When I interviewed surfer Kelly Slater he referenced utilizing Ben Hogan’s Five Lessons book and applying some golf techniques to surfing. One thing I realized speaking with Jennifer is that the Olympics all comes down to one day’s performance, there are no second chances. So the mindset of a swimmer and a golfer competing in the Olympics may be more similar than we think.

I first met Jennifer because of her connection with Brazil and Rio de Janeiro. I am happy I spoke with her about the logistics of my trip. But her insight applied to the ‘Olympic Spirit for Goflers’ was really interesting though she was careful to limit her expertise to swimming.

Here are some of my thoughts. She started at age 7 and dedicated her life for the next 13 years to preparing for the Olympic swimming trials in L.A for the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munic. when she was 20. Certainly no regrets there as she is in a perfect place in life coaching in her beloved sport and helping others achieve the Olympic aspiration. Olympic swimming is a ‘lifetime journey.’ So is golf evidence the Tiger Woods phenomenon. I love that you can play golf for a lifetime!

Swimmers, like golfers, need to stay calm and stay loose. As far as wanting adrenalin I think swimmers do and golfers would rather not have it. Though if they have adrenalin in a competitive situation (and most do even Tiger Woods), they need to be aware of it when making club selections.

Good food for thought as I journey to define the ‘Olympic Spirit for Golfers’ on my way to Rio!

Jennifer coached Anthony Ervin at the Canyons Aquatic Club in Santa Clarita, California.   At the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, he won a golf medal in the men’s 50-meter freestyle, and earned a silver medal as a member of the second-place U.S. relay team in the 4×100-meter freestyle event. He is the first swimmer of African American descent to medal in Olympic swimming (Wiki reference).

Jennifer also helps Stroke Victims at the UNF:

The lead trainer for the swim clinic is Jennifer Wish Salles-Cunha, who trained under two Hall of Fame coaches. She held many national records as an age-group swimmer and went on to several Senior National Championships and the U.S. Olympic Trials. She has produced Olympic Gold medalist Anthony Ervin, 16 nationally top-ranked swimmers as well as junior and senior national qualifiers.

 

 

The First Tee Comes Home to TPC Sawgrass!

TPC Sawgrass, everyone knows, is the ‘Home of THE PLAYERS Championship.’

TPC Sawgrass Clubhouse

Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass is all decked out for Military Tribute and Web.com Championship!

The crown jewel of the TPC network is also home to the PGA TOUR. Within a quarter mile of the Clubhouse, in the opposite direction, of the famed island 17th green, is the east and west corporate headquarters buildings of the world’s premium golf tour. On the corner of Championship Way and PGA TOUR Boulevard, is the portrait of three-time PLAYERS champion Jack Nicklaus. A chip shot away is the office of Tim Finchem, the Commissioner of the PGA TOUR.

For the first time, the eighth annual ‘Taste of Golf,’ benefiting The First Tee of North Florida, was held at the Clubhouse during the Web.com Tour Championship. The event marked a symbolic homecoming, in the sense that The First Tee has now matured to the age of ‘Sweet 16.’ Commissioner Tim Finchem and President George H. W. Bush, No. 41, kicked off The First Tee in New York City’s Central Park in November 1997. President George W. Bush, No. 43, took over for his father as Honorary Chairman in 2011. The First Tee was established through the World Golf Foundation and its founding members—the USGA, LPGA, Masters Tournament, PGA of America and the PGA TOUR.

As a sign of the times for the expanding organization, Joe Louis Barrow, Jr., Chief Executive Officer of The First Tee, was not present at the major fundraising event for the flagship North Florida chapter. Instead, he was at the Nature Valley First Tee Open at Pebble Beach, a Champions Tour event that pairs a junior with a professional and they compete together as a team.

Kirk Triplett and Michelle Xie win the 2013 Nature Valley First Tee Open.

Kirk Triplett and Michelle Xie win the 2013 Nature Valley First Tee Open.

This year was another ‘Cinderella Story’ at Pebble Beach with Michelle Xie, from the First Tee of Silicon Valley, playing Cinderella instead of Bill Murray. Kirk Triplett, who won the individual pro tournament, also won the Pro-Junior with Michelle, a 15-year old junior at Palo Alto High School. Two years ago, D.A. Points teamed up with the lovable Carl Spackler, to capture the same double win in the AT&T National Pro-Am.

Over 700 juniors from across the United States have had the incredible experience of playing Pebble Beach with a professional golfer in a golfing competition. The real impact of the First Tee program, is the program—the Code of Conduct, the Nine Core Values and the Nine Healthy Habits. By 2011, the dynamic and proven youth development program had reached over 7 million kids. At that time, the primary goal of the supporting organization was supercharged to reach another 10 million kids by 2017. The First Tee has fully come of age.

To the credit of the coaches and program leaders, the First tee of North Florida quietly communicates a 100% success rate. All of the Jacksonville area kids who have come through the First Tee graduate from high school and go on to college, with an academic or golf scholarship. The program is making a meaningful impact on young people and our communities. The First Tee is the best investment for your charitable dollars.

Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass was transformed into an art gallery for the 'Taste of Golf.'

Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass was transformed into an art gallery for the ‘Taste of Golf.’

The Clubhouse at TPC Sawgrass was transformed into an art gallery with many nationally recognized artists participating, with a portion of their sales going directly to The First Tee. ‘Taste of Golf’ Chairwoman Milan Moore and Jen Jones, Executive Director of Jacksonville’s Unity Plaza, recruited Keith Doles, Ted Johnson, Robert Leedy, Peter Blunt, Randy Pitts, Gordon Meggison, Marilyn Antram, Paul Ladiner, Barbara Quigley, Heather Blanton, Will Dickey and Suzanne McCourt, the Lady Artist from Pebble Beach. Suzanne, the neo-realism painter of golf’s historic moments, became the first woman to create the artwork for the Pebble Beach Pro-Am program in 2010.

Remember the night was entitled “A Taste of Golf.” The food delicacies, presented for consumption by the guests, included Shrimp Scampi Dijonnaise (Executive Chef Gary McKinsey, Deerwood CC); Nabchego-Stuffed Duck Meatball (Executive Chef Kira Lewis, Hidden Hills CC); Salmon in Two Preparations (Executive Chef Jason Hall, Certified Master Chef, Hammock Dunes); Beer Braised Pork Cheeks (Executive Chef Michael Ramsay, Jacksonville Golf & CC); Jumbo Lump Crab Tamales (Executive Chef Jerry Snider, San Jose CC); Duroc Pork Belly & Sweet Pea Sea Scallop (Executive Chefs Dan Webber and Marvin McClelland, Sawgrass CC); Grilled Wagyu Beef (Executive Chef LJ Coussin, TPC Sawgrass) and Sweet Potato Gnocchi (Executive Chef Brent Lynch, World Golf Village).

Amazing signs by Tory Eulenfeld of the National Golf Course Restaurant Association (NGCRA)

Amazing signs by Tory Eulenfeld of the National Golf Course Restaurant Association (NGCRA)

For dessert there were a Trilogy of Truffles, Mint Meringue, Chocolate Crunch Macaron and a Chocolate Blood Orange Hazelnut Shooter (Executive Pastry Chef Caitlin Schneider-Frantz, Jacksonville Golf & CC and Chef Nils Rowland, Ponte Vedra Inn & Club).

The festival night at the Clubhouse was memorable, with a lot of dignities including Mr. & Mrs. ‘59’ Jim and Tabitha Furyk, Amanda Balionis and Cole Pepper. There were several auctions and a significant portion of the chapter’s annual budget was raised.

Even more enduring is a trip to the Brentwood Course at the First Tee of North Florida facility. This is the same ground upon which Sam Snead won two of his record 82 PGA TOUR victories in the first two Jacksonville Opens. Brentwood is open to the public. With grass practice tees, inexpensive green fees, along with encouragement to walk, it is an ideal golfing facility.

As good as the golfing opportunity is, the chance to meet and play with the kids is even better. While the First Tee is all about the future, playing Brentwood gives older golfers the ability to reminisce and play like a kid again. One can’t help but notice, and reflect upon, the bridge over the railroad tracks heading to the second tee. Sports and education integrate and lift communities and the same is true at the First Tee of North Florida. These kids are going to go in any direction they so choose. The First Tee gives them that choice.

To donate to The First Tee, CLICK this link, and select ‘Journey to Olympic Golf’ from the drop-down menu for the question, ‘What inspired you to make a gift today.’ The goal of Golf Writer Andy Reistetter’s ‘Journey to Olympic Golf’ is to raise $100,000 for The First Tee.

Kids teeing off No. 6 at Brentwood.

Kids teeing off No. 6 at Brentwood. You could be golfing with them!

Ponte Vedra Inn & Club- The Ocean Course

Excerpt from The Golf Course Guide, a book published in 1950 by Anthony F. Merrill;

Every championship course has its famous hole and at Ponte Vedra it is the Island Ninth. Whether it is a good golf hole or not is a question, bit it is one of America’s most interesting. The green lies at the far end of a little island in a big lagoon, reached by bridges. The tee is on the mainland and the carry over water is not more than about 40 yards. In fact, the whole hole is only 150 yards, and the island is a decent-sized target. But the par is 3, the water magnetic, the green heavily trapped, and the hole itself is a scenic gem, most artfully designed to please the eye of a golfer and layman alike. Who cares how many of your best balls go into the lagoon? You do.

Brendan Punty writing for NJ.com,True New Jersey claims Baltusrol in Springfield, N.J. had the first island green, but it was a par-4 hole.

“When Baltusrol’s first 18-hole course was laid out near the turn of last century, the 10th hole was surrounded by a shallow moat — making it the first hole of its kind in the sport. The par-4, 330-yard downhill hole was one of the most photographed holes of the day…”

Huntsville Golf Club in Dallas, PA

Wow, Huntsville Golf Club in Dallas, PA is a spectacular golf course and club.

Huntsville Golf Club in Dallas, PA

Huntsville Golf Club in Dallas, PA