Tuesday, December 11, 2012

ELIE ASSISTANT PRO WINS FREE TRIP TO TUNISIA FESTIVAL

By LEE SUTHERLAND
The Midland Golfers’ Alliance held its last meeting of 2012 with a special event sponsored by the Tunisia Golf Festival. 
 Conditions were almost imposable with the ground being frozen solid. 
Best scratch scoring honours were shared by Cameron Ferguson, a two-handicap Muckhart amateur, and Edzell club pro Alistair Webster. They both shot 82.
The winner of the handicap prize by four strokes was Doug Sievwright, who plays off 14 at Drumoig, with a superb net score, in the conditions, of 73. 
Elie assistant professional Fraser Robertson won the all expenses paid trip to the Tunisia Golf Festival from February 9 to 16.
======================
Fraser Robertson is asked to E-mail Colin
Farquharson at Colin@scottishgolfview.com
ASAP for details of the Tunisia Festival trip
======================    
The prize was up for grabs by the professional with the lowest score - its value being over the amateur limit of £500. Alistair Webster, who had the lowest pro score of 82, is unable to make the trip to Tunisia on the dates mentioned due to earlier commitments.
Fraser Robertson had the next best pro score of 87, so he wins the free trip which starts from Manchester Airport on February 9.
LEADING SCRATCH SCORES
82 C Ferguson (Muckhart), A J Webster (Edzell) p.
84 K Bruce (Edzell), R Brownhill (Edzell).
85 H Salmond (Tulliallan), T Anderson (Downfield). 86 F Robertson (Elie) ap, W Crosbie (Blairgowrie).
87 D Mitchell (Monifieth), G Jenkins (Crieff), I Wilson (Craigiehill), D Sievwright (Drumoig).
LEADING HANDICAP SCORES 
D Sievwright (Drumoig) (14) 73; S Mitchell (Duke's) (12), J Leddy (Bathgate) (10) 77; J Wilson (Dunfermline) (14), R Lamont (Bathgate) (10) 78; H. Salmond (Tulliallan) (6), R Brownhill (Edzell) (5) 79; C Ferguson (Muckhart) (2) 80

Qualifiers for the JTC Kitchen Express Midland Golfers Alliance Championship in April at Crieff:
H Salmond (Tulliallan), T Anderson (Downfield), F Robertson (Elie).

Qualifier for the JTC Kitchen Express McQueen Shield at Crieff in April
 D Sievwright (Drumoig) 

Next Meeting
Tuesday 15th January
Crail Golfing Society, Craighead Links 
Tee reserved: 8.30 – 12.00

Labels:

GREG NICHOLSON AIMS TO MAKE 2013 HIS BREAKTHROUGH YEAR AS A TOUR PRO


GREG NICOLSON ... reckons his game has developed well during 2012


A lost wallet in a Bangkok taxi, missed Europro Tour cuts, a hand injury during Asian Tour Q School , a visa required to cross a Middle East city, playing an identical wrong ball, stomach upsets in the Far East, an 8-iron shot flying 230 yards – all part of the ‘learning experience’ for Greg  Nicolson in his tour pro rookie Year!

But after 12 months on the UK, Middle East and Asian development tours in 2012, the Mortonhall Golf Club, Edinburgh pro reckons that his game has developed well during a year that ended with a consistent 16th on the Middle East North Africa (MENA) Tour Order of Merit in November. 
"Definitely a learning year in many ways – planning travel, finance and accommodation alongside gym work, golf practice and tournaments has been a challenge, but I have enjoyed playing some great golf courses and making new friends on the different tours," says Greg.
"It was also great to bump into other Scots like Duncan Stewart and David Law on my travels. I have lots of room for improvement but have gained confidence and I can’t wait for 2013 to get started!"I’ve got to thank Mortonhall GC, Glencairn Crystal, and my various individual shareholders for the financial support that made my rookie year possible, but I’m hoping 2013 will be a big year for me as I head off to Dubai this week for warm weather practice before the Asian Tour Q school in January. 

"And if anyone fancies a golfing ‘punt’, I have also now re-launched my Share Scheme for 2013 – with shares at £50 and returns dependant on my prize money.
"I’m aiming to win a lot more next year so they might make good Christmas stocking-fillers, while reducing my own financial risk!"

 Anyone interested in backing Greg Nicolson in this way, should contact his father Pete on 07966 350270 or E-mail peternicolson@hotmail.com to obtain a share application form or gift voucher.
Pete says: "Greg plans to play in Asia, the Middle East and UK again next year -  but hoping to use his experiences from 2012 to decide a better  schedule. "He is lucky to have a brother who lives in Abu Dhabi, so he has a good base in Middle East when he needs one. 
"The Asian Q School in January 2013 will determine how much he can play in Asia , so he will firm up his plans after that.
"By end of 2013, Greg aims to have won enough prize money to confirm that he can survive as a touring pro, and to have commenced getting some starts on the Challenge Tour and/or Asian Tour events as a result."

 

Labels:

FALKIRK'S ALLAN BRYSON WINS VOLUNTEER OF THE YEAR AWARD

FROM THE SGU WEBSITE
Falkirk Golf Club’s Junior Match Secretary Allan Bryson has just become the first person to win the prestigious sportscotland Volunteer of the Year Award 2012.
As part of sportscotland’s Coaching, Officiating and Volunteering Awards 2012, around 200 nominations were submitted for the nine categories, with the winners being picked by an independent national selection panel.
The Volunteer of the Year Award was a new category for this year and Bryson was recognised for his tireless work with the junior section at Falkirk.
Iain Kennedy, from sportscotland’s Coaching and Volunteering team, said: “We are delighted to have awarded Allan with the inaugural sportscotland Volunteer of the Year Award, he is a very deserving recipient.
“It is down to the dedication and commitment of people like Allan that young people are encouraged to be the best they can be in their chosen sport. The work that Allan puts into the junior section at Falkirk Golf Club is amazing and we congratulate him on this award.”
Allan, who has been running the Junior Section at Falkirk Golf Club for three years, is rightly proud of his achievement. He said: “It’s a great honour to be recognised nationally and great credit must go to all the juniors at Falkirk Golf Club who are fantastic to work with.
“Falkirk Golf Club is very proud of its Junior Section, which has become one of the best in Scotland.”
Falkirk Golf Club is one of the few courses in Scotland that offer a parkland 18-hole course, along with a nine-hole par 3 course (The Wee Course) developed for the encouragement of Juniors. 
The club is recognised as having one of the leading Junior sections in the Central belt and has developed several junior international players to date, both boys and girls, and recently was the holder of all Stirlingshire Golf Championships, team and individual – a remarkable feat.
Allan added: “A great deal of time and effort goes into the running of the coaching and development of the juniors, but to see them progress and also enjoy the game makes it very worthwhile.”
Free ClubGolf coaching is also available utilising the extensive practice facilities at the club run by Stewart Craig, a European Tour Coach.
Billy Crozier, Falkirk Golf Club Captain, said: “We are very proud of Allan and all the juniors. This is not only a remarkable achievement for Allan as an individual but also for the club as a whole, one of which Falkirk Golf Club is proud. This is a very friendly club who take pride in their junior section.”
"It’s an exciting time at Falkirk Golf Club where, despite a disappointing season due to the ravages of the weather, the club is making some major changes to help provide the level of services the members deserve."
A new position of Club Manager has been advertised to ensure that the running of the club is undertaken to the highest level and along side this a new catering franchise is being introduced to provide first-class facilities for all to enjoy - members and visitors alike.
>> Click here for more information on Falkirk Golf Club

Labels:

US RYDER CUP CAPTAIN TO BE NAMED ON THURSDAY TV SHOW

FROM THE GOLF DIGEST WEBSITE
By DOUG FERGUSON
AP Golf Writer
The PGA of America is introducing its next Ryder Cup captain during a segment of the "Today" TV show on Thursday.
Adding to the intrigue of the announcement is whether the PGA of America will stick to its prototype of a former major champion who still plays on the US PGA Tour, or whether it will look farther into its past to find its latest captain.
David Toms fits the former category, while there has been strong sentiment for either Tom Watson or Larry Nelson.
Nelson is a three-time major champion with a sterling Ryder Cup record. Watson was captain when the Americans last won in Europe in 1993 at The Belfry. The 2014 Ryder Cup will be played at Gleneagles in Scotland where Watson won four of his Open titles. 

DAVID TOMS IS FAVOURITE 

LATER NEWS FROM BBC SPORTS.COM
David Toms, the 2001 US PGA champion, is expected to succeed Davis Love as the US attempt to end a run of two defeats.
"To be able to captain a US team and get a victory, would be one of the highlights of my career - if not the highlight," the 45-year-old said.
Europe's captain is likely to be named next month, with Darren Clarke and Paul McGinley favourites for the role.
Ted Bishop, the president of the Professional Golfers' Association of America, will announce the new American skipper during the NBC television network's morning Today Show.
"It's the best event in golf," Toms said.
Toms lost only one of his five games on his Ryder Cup debut at The Belfry in 2002, but scored only one point two years later and did not win a game in Ireland in 2006.
He did not feature at Medinah in September, Jeff Sluman, Scott Verplank, Mike Hulbert and Fred Couples, the vice-captains to Love, as the US saw a 10-4 lead evaporate on the final day and Europe produced a record comeback to win an extraordinary contest 14½-13½.
 

Labels:

RORY MCILROY’S MAJOR PLANS FOR 2013


Wise guidance from respected old hands and the love of a good woman inspired Rory McIlroy – Global Golf Post’s 2012 Player of the Year – to heights this year unimagined even by his lofty standards. And without giving hostages to fortune, he has reason to be confident of a similar outcome in 2013.
Predictably, the majors will be his prime targets once more, having tucked away the significant bonus of the money lists on both sides of the Atlantic.
“This year, I was out of it for three of them,” he admitted, regarding finishes of tied 40, T95 and T60 in The Masters, US Open and Open Championship. “I’d like to think that I can be in contention for all four next year, while maintaining my position as world number one. They’re the goals I want to set myself.”
In the meantime, his life is held perfectly in balance by a deepening relationship with girlfriend Caroline Wozniacki, with whom he travelled to Aspen, Colorado and Sao Paulo, Brazil in the wake of his Dubai World Tour Championship triumph, to watch her in exhibition tennis matches on the run up to Christmas.
“This is my time off; my time away (from golf),” he said. “And I need it. If I have time, I’ll travel wherever in the world Caroline is, just to see her. That’s what I want to do. That’s what makes me happy.”
Then he added pointedly: “Obviously, it’s very satisfying to win majors and important golf tournaments, but deep down, what makes me really happy is my life outside of golf and how that is at the moment. It enables me to play great golf because everything is sort of in balance.”
To my gentle suggestion that most of us have known what it’s like to be in love, he laughed almost apologetically, adding, “I know, I know” by way of acknowledging that his relationship with Caroline, while obviously special to him, is not unique.
From West Palm Beach, where he enjoys the amenities of The Bear’s Club, the 23-year-old seems happy to travel the world, on and off planes and living out of suitcases.
“That’s just the way my life has become, but I don’t plan for it to remain this way,” he said. “I’d love in a few years’ time to find a base and settle down. That would be ideal. I don’t think someone can do this for a prolonged period like 10 years, say.”
Would marriage create that situation? “For sure. But I still feel I’d do it anyway.”
Meanwhile, Jack Nicklaus, Dave Stockton and Tiger Woods have become serious influences in his tournament career, though boyhood tutor, Michael Bannon, remains his trusted coach. A finish of five successive birdies in Dubai prompted comparisons with Woods at his peak, and while not necessarily at odds with the notion, McIlroy insists that they are very different people.
“For sure,” he emphasised. “I can’t bring the intensity Tiger brings every week. He can sort of turn it on, which is impressive. It’s something that I struggle to do sometimes. Though I can generally bring it to the big events where I really want to do well, I would find it very difficult to do it every week. That’s why I’ll be cutting my schedule to a maximum of 22 or 23 tournaments next year, starting in Abu Dhabi in January.”
He went on: “Too much competitive golf simply isn’t good for you. That’s where Tiger is very smart, bringing the same level of intensity to 20 tournaments a year. It’s an emotional thing, of course. I had a great end to the summer with the PGA win and two FedEx Cup wins and the Ryder Cup, but you reach such a high that you’ve got to allow yourself get all the way back down again. Then, having got down, I had to build myself up again for a last push towards winning the European money list.”
A closeness to his father Gerry, to Nicklaus and putting coach Stockton, suggests a respect for older heads.
“Of course I have,” he confirmed. “I can still be pretty stubborn, wanting to do things my way, but they’ve obviously seen a lot more of the world than I have. It’s great just to see Jack around and have a casual lunch with him and not even talk about golf. Just talk about normal stuff; what’s going on in the world. And Dave has been a great influence on me and a great addition to my team.”
In late February 2009, the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship in Tucson marked McIlroy’s professional debut in the US, a few weeks after his first win in Dubai. Ranked 17th in the world, he reacted with remarkable composure to the prediction from Ernie Els that he was set to become the game’s number one.
With a self-assured smile, he remarked: “You’ve got to believe you’re the best; that no one can beat you.”
Fascinated observers sensed instantly that this 19-year-old was different. And those of us familiar with him, prepared ourselves for what we knew would be a wonderful journey.
Dermot Gilleece
THE IMPROBABLE CLIMB OF STACY LEWIS
Circumstances were so very much stacked against her but Stacy Lewis has not only made a career but a lifetime of beating the odds. She probably never should have played golf, much less have risen to the top of her profession.
But despite her longtime physical challenges, Lewis has overcome them to become one of the best players in women’s golf. And her performance in 2012 earns her Global Golf Post’s Female Player of the Year.
That, paired with the Rolex Player of the Year on the LPGA Tour, the first time an American has earned that award since Beth Daniel did it 18 years ago. And as a bit of serendipity, Daniel presented the award to Lewis at the awards dinner during the week of the CME Titleholders, the last event of the year on the LPGA Tour.
Lewis won four times on the LPGA Tour in 2012 and had 16 top-10 finishes. She won the Mizuno Classic, the ShopRite LPGA Classic, the Navistar LPGA Classic and the Mobile Bay Championship. She didn’t win a major but she tied for second at the Wegmans LPGA Championship and the Evian Masters, which will be a major in 2013, and tied for fourth at the Kraft Nabisco.
“Since the middle of the year, my goal has been to be the Player of the Year,” Lewis said. “It's something an American hasn't done since 1994. I wanted to end that trend. That's the big-picture goal. Day to day is just (to) give myself chances to win every week. You still have to do the little things right, give yourself a chance to win on Sunday and see what happens from there.”
In her fourth year on the LPGA Tour, Lewis already holds one major championship, the 2011 Kraft Nabisco, which was her first victory on Tour. Since then, her career has experienced a steady climb. She has three other top-five finishes in majors and this year she was third in putts per green in regulation, third in greens in regulation and third in scoring average.
“I think that combination sets your scoring numbers, and that's been the difference in the numbers,” Lewis said. “But I think overall, my swing has kind of fully gotten better over the last probably year and a half where it's a lot more solid now.
“And this year I've putted so good that that's the difference. You win golf tournaments with your putter. You don't win it with your driver. So your golf swing can be as good as you want, but if you don't make the putts, you're not going to win anything.”
Lewis found out when she was 11 years old that she had scoliosis, an abnormal curvature of the spine. As a result, she wore a back brace 18½ hours a day, only removing it to play golf. In her senior year in high school, the back brace was set aside, but the malformation was getting worse.
She underwent surgery during which a rod and five screws were inserted in her spine. After three more months in a brace and six months of rehab, Lewis amazingly started playing golf again. During her career at Arkansas, she won 12 college tournaments, including the 2007 individual NCAA Championship. She was a member of the U.S. Curtis Cup team in 2008 and was the first player in history to go 5-0 for the matches.
In 2007, while an amateur, she received a sponsor’s exemption to the LPGA NW Arkansas Championship and shot a first-round 65 to lead the tournament. Eventually, the final two rounds were washed out and Lewis was declared the winner, although the tournament was declared unofficial because it did not complete 36 holes. She also tied for fifth at the Kraft Nabisco that year to be the tournament’s low amateur.
She turned professional in 2008 in mid-summer and qualified for the U.S. Women’s Open, where she led the championship through three rounds, played in the final group on Sunday and wound up finishing tied for third. She gained playing privileges on the LPGA Tour in December of that year, winning Q-School by three shots over a talented field.
It was then that her story began to be told and people all over the world started to look at her as an inspiration, a role model along with her performance as a championship golfer.
“I don't know, I guess I am,” she said. “I definitely get a lot of e-mails and letters from kids that they look up to me, things like that. I don't know if I see myself that way, because I just know what I went through with scoliosis, that’s something that I had to go through at the time and I didn’t have really any option. I don’t know if I am but other people say I am.”
And that number is growing.
Mike Purkey at the GlobalGolfPost
to get a free subscription to the Global Golf Post Click here

GARETH WRIGHT LYING JOINT THIRD IN PGA PLAY-OFFS IN TURKEY

FROM THE PGA WEBSITE
Irish ace David Higgins continues to ride the crest of a golfing wave after shooting a 66 to lead the Titleist PGA Play-Offs in Turkey today.
Fresh from his recent success in securing his tour card, the 40-year-old is firmly in the hunt for further starts in some of the European Tour's most lucrative events which a win at Antalya Golf Club's PGA Sultan Course will guarantee.
Among the prizes at stake include entry to the BMW PGA Championship plus a place for the top three in the Great Britain & Ireland PGA Cup team to play the United States next year.
However breathing down the neck of the Waterville Links man is defending champion Richard Wallis (Walmer and Kingsdown) who beat Higgins into second place last year and is a stroke behind following an opening round of four-under-par 67.
Three shots further back six players are tied third including 2007 winner Paul Streeter (Lincoln Golf Centre) and the 2012 Glenmuir PGA Professional champion Gareth Wright (West Linton).
With lightning and thunderstorms wiping out the first day's play yesterday, the 24-strong field reconvened today amidst glorious warm sunshine as they prepare to complete 72 holes in three days.
Both Higgins and Wallis had putters to match the hot sun as they each carded five birdies though the latter's round was not without its tribulations not least his lazar measuring device which packed up halfway down the first fairway.
But, using yardages paced out from the ball of his playing partner Matt Cort (Rothley Park), he showed few ill effects with a flying start that yielded three birdies in his opening five holes.Closing gains on 15 and 17 offset a solitary bogey on seven.
Higgins meanwhile returned a flawless card although it wasn't until the eighth that he registered his first birdie. Further birdies came at 11, 15, 16 and 17 to leave him in pole position in the £15,000 tournament.
"I played solid, didn't really miss many shots and putted nicely and if you do that you usually have a good score," said Higgins.
"Getting my tour card has taken a lot of pressure off. It doesn't make this week easier as I'm trying my hardest to win but having been through what I did at Tour School the pressure here is not quite as intense.
"It would mean a lot to me to win the PGA Play-Offs. These are the best PGA players in Britain and Ireland and it would be a great achievement so I will be giving it everything I've got."
Wallis declared himself happy with his round, bar his equipment failure on the first, but freely conceded there was one outright favourite.
"We all know that we are chasing David Higgins this week. He's had a fantastic year topped off by getting his tour card, so we are just trying to hang on to his coat tails," said Wallis - winner of three successive PGA South Region Order of Merits.
"I'm happy with four under and would have taken that this morning because it was quite blowy out there.
"I'm happy here because it's a course that suits me and I just aim to play steady and try and hang on to David but the field is very strong and the course is set up quite tricky."
Among the clutch of players tied third is Sundridge Park teaching pro Andrew Butterfield who starts a new job on Monday as head pro at Knole Park in Kent.
Having not struck a ball in the build up, the former European and Challenge Tour player was delighted to be one under for his round.
"I haven't played for months, not even hit a ball, because I was so busy teaching and then applying for the new job where I had to do a presentation and write a business plan which took up all my time," he explained.
"I played pretty well considering. I found the water a couple of times, including on the par five 16th when I went for it with my second shot. I thought I'd hit a good shot but the hazard juts out quite a bit but I managed to get up and down for a par."
Matt Dearden (Vale Hotel) leads the Welsh charge also on 70 with West Linton's Wright flying the flag for Scotland on the same score with 2010 Plays-Off winner Greig Hutcheon at level par.
 SCOTSWATCH
West Linton's Gareth Wright, the Glenmuir PGA champion, would have been third on his own on two-under-par 69 had he parred the 18th, instead of bogeying it.The Welshman had birdies at the fifth, ninth, 11th and long 16th against bogeys at the long seventh, 15th and 18th.Banchory's Greig Hutcheon, the Tartan Tour supremo in 2012, cancelled out birdies at the short second, fourth, 14th and long 16th with bogeys at the short sixth, 10th, 11th and 18th in returning a par 71 for joint ninth place overnight.Scott Henderson (Kings Links) had a 75 for a share of 17th place. The Aberdonian dropped shots at regular intervals - the long third, fifth, short eighth, 12th, 15th and 18th. His only two birdies came at the 10th and long 16th.David Orr (Mearns Academy) had an off-day, taking 40 shots to the turn on his way to a six-over 77. He failed to par any of the four par-3 holes and eight bogeys were offset by only two birdies, at the 11th and 14th.


FIRST-ROUND LEADERBOARD
Par 71
66 David Higgins (Waterville Golf Links)
67 Richard Wallis (Walmer and Kingsdown)
70 James Whatley  (East Midlands Academy, Morley Hayes), Barrie Trainor (Ireland), Andrew Butterfield (Sundrige Park), Paul Streeter (Lincoln Golf Centre), Matthew Dearden (Vale Hotel, Wales), Gareth Wright (West Linton).

71 Mark Hooper  (Rayleigh Golf Range), Tom Fleming (Frilford Heath), Greig Hutcheon (Banchory), Matthew Cort (Rothley Park).
72 Craig Shave (Whetstone).
73 Jason Levermore (Clacton), Adrian Ambler (Low Laithes).

SELECTED SCORES
75 Scott Henderson (Kings Links) (T17)
77 David Orr (Mearns Academy) (21st)
  
The top three eligible finishers at Antalya will qualify for the Great Britain & Ireland PGA Cup team to face the United States at De Vere Slaley Hall, September 20-22, 2013.

The top 10 qualify for the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth, May 23-26, 2013.

 
TO VIEW ALL THE FIRST-ROUND SCORES

CLICK HERE 

Labels:

OFF THE BEATEN TRACK GOLF IN SCOTLAND: Newburgh-on-Ythan, Aberdeenshire

FROM THE GOLF DIGEST WEBSITE
By DAVID OWEN
One of the Daves I played with at Newburgh-on-Ythan, in Scotland. He’s teeing off on the 18th hole, a par-5, which was once said to be the longest golf hole in Scotland. 
Snow began to fall as we reached the green, although it didn’t fall for very long.
Last April, I played a round at Newburgh-on-Ythan Golf Club, on the east coast of Scotland, north of Aberdeen and  about halfway between Royal Aberdeen and Cruden Bay
The round was unusual in that all three members of my threesome were named Dave (One of the Daves was the club’s captain, but I no longer remember which one).
Newburgh was founded in 1888, a year before my golf club at home. Originally, it had nine holes and was only a little over two thousand yards long. 
The hole called “Long” was just three hundred and thirty-three yards.
(Editor's note: David Owen has got it slightly wrong here. When it was a nine-hole course, Newburgh had a hole that measured well over 600 yards).
 The nine-hole course was originally laid out like this:

The second nine of the current course occupies the same piece of ground as the original course, although the layout has changed. The new nine is situated on the hill shown in the upper left-hand corner of the map above. 
One of the new holes incorporates an ancient wall thing, and if your ball ends up inside the enclosure you may have trouble hitting it out, as one of the Daves did:

A rare photo, showing both of the non-me Daves at the same time. No photo of all three Daves is known to exist.
The most famous person ever to take golf lessons at Newburgh is probably Prince Phra Bat Somdet Phra Poramentharamaha Vajiravudh Phra Mongkut Klao Chao Yu Hua (later King Vajiravudh) of Siam (later Thailand), who learned to play there in 1897, the same year the map above was drawn. 
Here’s what the Prince looked like after he became King:

The future king learned to play golf while staying for a month at the Udny Arms Hotel, Newburgh across from what was then the first tee and is now (more or less) the thirteenth. The hotel still exists, and from the outside it looks pretty much the same as it did in 1897. I had a nice meal there the day after I played the course.
The wind blows hard on Scotland’s east coast, and one result is the mountain-size pile of sand in the photo below. It’s on the far side of the estuary of the River Ythan, directly across from the golf course:
The Sands of Forvie, across the Ythan estuary from Newburgh-on-Ythan Golf Club.
The mountain of sand is part of Forvie National Nature Reserve. You can enter the reserve from a parking lot a mile north of Newburgh and walk all the way across it to the sea:
I hiked across the reserve along this road.
A large part of the reserve was closed when I was there, to protect nesting terns, but I was able to explore the ruins of the village of Forvie, which was buried by blowing sand in the early 1400s. All that’s left are some piles of stones and part of the village church, which was built on high ground:

What’s left of Forvie Kirk, and of Forvie itself.

Forvie Kirk was built in the 1100s and was dedicated to St. Adamnan, who was born in Ireland in the seventh century. Adamnan visited Scotland in the late 600s and, apparently, made an impression. He didn’t bring luck to the residents of Forvie, however.
I took this picture for my wife, who, for unknown reasons, has become interested in moss and lichen. To make up for the fact that I’d abandoned her for a week, I smuggled home a golf-ball-size chunk of moss from Aberdeen, as a present. (Never bring your wife a golf shirt or golf hat, no matter how much you loved the course.)
Near the path I followed into the reserve were several stations like the one below, which were equipped with tools I could have used to stamp out any fires I happened to have started. Luckily, I didn’t start any.

I’m not sure that I need to play Newburgh-on-Ythan again, but I’m glad I played it once, and I’m glad I met the Daves, and I’m glad I found that old ruined church. And the chunk of moss I brought my wife is now growing near our back door. It didn’t make up for the trip, but it probably helped.
DAVID OWEN
Golf Digest 

Labels:

GAVIN DEAR WINS $1,000 FLORIDA PRIZE WITH EIGHT-BIRDIE ROUND

    GAVIN DEAR IN ACTION ON MONDAY IN FLORIDA
          From the Golfslinger.com Tour website
By COLIN FARQUHARSON
colin@scottishgolfview.com
Gavin Dear shot eight birdies in a round of five-under 67 to win the $1,000 first prize in the Golfslinger.com Tour's Atlantis December Open over 18 holes at Atlantis Country Club, Florida on Monday.
The 28-year-old Scone player, who is attached to Murrayshall House Hotel near Perth but is wintering in Florida at his Delray Beach base, birdied the first, third, sixth, ninth, 10th, 11th, 15th and 16th to offset bogeys at the seventh, eighth and 14th.
It was his second win on the Florida mini-tour which specialises in one-day events, usually four a week, throughout the year. Entry to each tournament costs $200.
Dear's first win as a pro in Florida - he won the Dixie Amateur before that - came on October 28, 2009 since when he has won a total of $7,000 in on-and-off appearances on the circuit.
Dear spent four years in Florida as a student at Lynn University, Boca Raton 
He won the Atlantis December Open by two shots from a group of five players on the three-under 69 mark.
In an E-mail to Scottishgolfview.com from Florida, Gavin wrote:

"I am slightly unsure what I will be doing next year. Obviously I haven't had the best last couple of years. Most likely I will play on the EuroPro Tour due to financial restrictions. I should also get a few Challenge Tour starts. 
"I am a much better player than I ever have been I just need to show it. Sometimes it takes a while to all click, so hopefully next year is when it does."
Greg Duncan from Edinburgh, the only other Scot on the Golfslinger.com Tour, finished 13th with a par 72 and earned $100.

Labels:

Copyright © Colin Farquharson

If you can't find what you are looking for.... please check the Archive List or search this site with Google