Driving home last night, and feeling a bit low on protein, I stopped in Mid Pines for a cleansing Guiness.
As the protein started to circulate amongst my brain cell(s), I started thinking what a neat course Mid Pines remains to this day. Save for the 9th and 14th greens and a creek that branched into the 3rd fairway from the 5th hole, the course is pure Ross.
And yet, on a good driving day, the good golfer rarely has to hit any long or even mid iron clubs into the greens. This is a shame as technology has robbed this course of the variety that it once certainly possessed.
Then I starting thinking back to a round with Rick Holland and Ralph Livingston at The Dunes in Michigan. Ralph (web site:www.hichorygolf.com) let us hit some of his clubs.
As I recall, it seems like the loss in distance on well struck shots is ~ 10% - i.e. an 8 iron goes 130 as opposed to 140 something. Better yet, the poorly hit shots ended up with poor results, a crucial attribute if golf is meant to remain a game.
I think of all my genuine favorite courses - Swinley, St. Enodoc, West Sussex, Eastward Ho!, Jasper Park, Macrihanish, Shoreacres, Lawsonia, Maidstone - and it just seems like hickory shafts makes them all the better/more fun.
What is the down side to playing with hickory? There is the cost to get a set of 8-10 clubs (any idea how much that would be?) but after that, I am really starting to warm to the idea. I no longer have to wait for the Past Presidents of the USGA to figure out which way is up and can get on with a very fun game.
Who out there plays them? One thing seems for sure: more and more hickory tournaments will continue to pop up - it just seems more fun.
Cheers,