Fortunately the course being out of commission coincided with your injury. Hopefully by the time you have recovered the situation will have improved at the club. Best wishes.
Ed;
Yes, it's funny how good God has been to me given I am an atheist.
Thanks for your thoughts. I am at that very frustrating stage when the surgery has repaired significantly, I have some reasonable movement, but still basically can't do anything. All I want to do is have a putt and chip on the carpet!
I feel for the rest of the members who are unable to play the course during a lovely patch of Spring weather when man should be nowhere else.
James;
Thanks very much. I appreciate your words.
Chris;
Doak would only be in the middle of the pack as far as creditors go. There is at least one other owed much more than twice that amount, and I imagine someone else who was also owed something similar but was given a good in kind would be feeling quite nervous at the moment.
Scott;
It's an interesting proposition as to whether St Andrews Beach suffers from its proximity to The National, or whether there is a market for another two club development in that part of the world.
I know several members of St AB have homes or weekenders on the Peninsula, but a large number of members also live in town and come to play. I live 1 1/4 hours from the club, but most would be a little further than that.
A 90 minute drive is nothing in a car;on a sheep, it is probably a different matter.
Ultimately I don't think it matters that St AB is close to The National. The directors of St AB have only done three things right; 1)Appointing Tom Doak and Mike Clayton to design the courses; 2)Appointing John Geary as Superintendent, and 3) Establishing a different type of club to The National.
Leaving aside the debate over which courses are better, I would never join The National because it is just not my type of club, which is not meant as a slur to them. I know of many other St AB members who feel the same.