Search This Blog

Friday, April 23, 2010

The weather has been great since the Pinehurst trip, but there hasn't been enough time for golf. And the weather has almost been too good- not enough rain.  When the snow finally melted, the course looked better than it had ever been.  Since then, however, a dry spring has made things look a little too much like mid-summer.  Not enough green and the recent aeration has left the greens looking a  little ragged.

After Pinehurst, I switched to a set of Hogan Apex grind irons from the early 90s. Coupled with my new swing, I hit them well and had a couple of good rounds, including an early morning 73.  But I still have too many round in the low 40s.  In the meantime, I purchased a used Louisville Golf SmartDriver with 11 degree loft and a graphite shat that I have been hotting very well.  Louisville Golf is one of the last persimmon clubmakers around (Joe Powell golf in Florida is the other).  The problem is that I feel guilty using a graphite shafted driver so I keep looking for one with a steel shaft that I can hit almost as far and consistently.  I tried a Louisville Golf Classic 50s driver this afternoon without much luck, so the search continues.  I have switched over to Classic 50s fairway woods (3&5) with Dynamic gold shafts that I really like and will keep in the bag for a while. I also am currently using a Ram Tom Watson 58* sand wedge that I like a lot.  I switched out the Apex Grind irons today for a set of Powerbilt Scotch blades (don't know the year- probably late 80s or 90s) that I may keep and take to Scotland.  They are a muscleback blade with added weight in the toe.  This seems to suit me for some reason- more shots missed on the toe than the heel, I guess.

The new clubhouse at my home course is almost done- finally!  The next post should include a review of the facilities and the micro brewery beer that will be featured there.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Spring

It's about a month since my last post, but it seems years away from the snow and cold of this long winter. I am headed out to play golf this afternoon and the high today is supposed to be 85*- wow.

The trip to Pinehurst over spring break began this stretch of nice weather.  Our only new course was an old Donald Ross design called Southern Pines.  Most of us liked the course well enough, but the clubhouse was a dump- they argued that the recession means that they don't stock any merchandise anymore. Sounds like bad business to me, but what do I know about running a golf course.  The problem is that because the course had such a "temporary" almost-out-of-business feel to it, I doubt we will go back.

I am a fan of links and links style courses along with the old fashioned courses I grew up with in the midwest with oak and maple trees and streams- stuff that looks like old farmland. The courses in the sandhills region around Pinehurst all have the same look and feel to me, especially in early spring when the bermuda grass is dormant and brown. There is inevitably lots of bunkering (though oddly I stay away from them most of the time) and many fairways lined with pine trees.  You rarely lose your ball because there is little undergrowth and you can see it against the pine straw. The courses aren't long, so keeping the ball in play is the most important thing so you aren't hitting little 90 degree chips out of the woods back into the fairway. The greens are mostly larger than I am used to and so there are more three putts.  Some are quite fast even in the sprin and others aren't so you never know what you will find from one course to the next.

My vintage clubs of choice for the trip included my Honma woods and the rechromed MacGregor colokrom irons I mentioned in the last post. Line everyone else, my game was rusty and this showed itself in erractic driving and a mediocre short game.I shot 83-83-87-83. The 87 was on a beautiful day on what is usually my favorite course- a Nicklaus design called The Legacy. The last few years I have averaged in the upper 70s on this course (which we sometimes play twice) but this year I made a real mess of it. On the last day I shot a 45-38 while working on a swing change that I happened on during practice on the range before the round.  It took 9 holes to kick in, but it helped considerably, making my swing feel more natural and comfortable which is what I didn't feel most of the trip.

The Colokrom irons were nice enough, but seemed very short and had dynamic gold shafts- not my favorites. So after I got back I switched to Hogan Apex Grinds (early 90s) with Apex stiff shafts.  Ilike these a lot better. I have a couple of new persimmon drivers to try out and will report on them in the next post.  In the meantime, here are a couple of photos from the trip. The first shows me proudly wielding my Honma persimmon- with Doug obvioulsy admiring its U-shaped grain!  The second picture is of the "gang of twelve" who went to Pinehurst this year.