What factors/events/influences/circumstances do you think led most of us to be
a) golfers,
Parents. My mom took me out to play when I was 9, let me use her clubs (2W, 7I, & P) and we lived adjacent to a vintage 1899 muni-course where the pro let kids play for 50 cents before 10 AM… we called it the Country Club in grade school, a name that stuck and still have an annual reunion / memorial tourney there every summer with the kids who grew up on all four sides +. When I started lugging her bag to play, I got my first set of MacGregors (3-5-7-9-P-D-3W) tartan bag included..
b) who have an interest in the architecture of the courses we play and
I don’t know about most, but there was a Sports Illustrated article a long time ago, I think by Dan Jenkins, that described himself and friends playing street golf in Dallas/Fort Worth area in north TX; my best friend and I created something similar for evening sojourns to the nearby muni and back home by dark. We used whiffle balls while in the neighborhood, and changed to real ones at the school yard.
Interest in gca post-college, when $ weren’t prime issue and wanting to be able to score better in friendly competition.
c) are drawn to finding and playing examples of quality architecture, far and wide and
There were some nice local country club courses that we’d get one or two chances a season to play at while growing up.. always felt like Eddie Haskel saying yes sir, no sir, thank you sir…
Hey, if I’m trailing spouse on business trip to UK, definitely planned to take in what ever could be worked out.. TOC & Ganton in mild spetember weather.. priceless!
d) who then want to dig deeper into how/why we have experienced the architecture the way we did and
Tricks of the visual/physical trade.. environmental scientist golfer seeking truth and knowledge
e) who search back into the history and the philosophies past and present of golf architecture in order to contextualize this experience?
Gca archives and coffee table books.. but I’d rather play and experience than read about it..