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Why You Should Skip Work to Play Golf On Halloween

October 29, 2014 | By Greg D'Andrea | Leave a Comment

Woodhaven Country Club, Connecticut
Woodhaven Country Club, Connecticut (Photo by Greg D’Andrea)

Why should the kiddies have all the fun on Halloween? The much-beloved holiday of tricks or treats is a mere two days away, yet I bet you’re planning on going into work like it’s just any other day, aren’t you? Not only is it All Hollows’ Eve, but it’s also a Friday! You deserve a skip day, don’t you? I mean, who doesn’t love a 3-day weekend?

Simsbury Farms Golf Course, Connecticut
Simsbury Farms Golf Course, Connecticut (Photo by Greg D’Andrea)

Let’s face it, the year is winding down and you need to use that PTO before you lose it…Am I right? And the golf season – well, that’s almost extinct if you live in the northern half of the United States. You need to get out there while you still can! Plus, I bet the course will be pretty empty.

Now I realize some of you may have blown through your vacation time during the summer. Or maybe you’re saving your last few days for the holiday season. Don’t fret, there are some very clever ways to get in a round of golf on company time (see HERE).

Sleeping Giant Golf Course, Connecticut
Sleeping Giant Golf Course, Connecticut (Photo by Greg D’Andrea)

See? No more excuses – get out on the course and give yourself a treat on Halloween for a change. And while you’re at it, make sure the camera is close at hand – I bet there’ll be some great leaf peeping opportunities. And once you’ve captured the foliage, go ahead and add it to our Autumn Golf Courses Pinterest board:

Follow GolfStinks’s board Autumn Golf Courses on Pinterest.

So grab your favorite pumpkin-flavored beverage (latte or ale) and get out to the golf course this Halloween – you deserve it.

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: autumn, ditch day, fall, foliage, halloween, pto, vacation, work

Golfing in the New England Autumn

October 14, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | Leave a Comment

fall, autumn golf
Woodhaven Country Club, CT (Photo by Greg D’Andrea)

For me, golf season normally begins in the late April/early May area generally depending upon the weather being cooperative.  Anyone who has spent any significant period of time here in New England understands that the old Mark Twain saying (which has since been adopted by many other areas of the country) “If you don’t like the weather in New England, just wait a few minutes,” is pretty much on the money.  There have been times when I could swear I’ve experienced all four seasons within a period of 24 hours!  I remember one occasion where my job was shut down and I was sent home early due to a major snowstorm blowing through.  That afternoon, I was at the driving range.  So you can get my drift.  And if that’s the case for one day, imagine what a stretch of a few weeks will bring!

But despite when “golf season” actually kicks off, for me, the best part of golf season begins right around now – mid-October.  Why?  Well, quite simply, it’s the best time of year for golf here in CT.  The temperature is right, the humidity is dropping and the best part of it all…the scenery.  But for those not here in New England, or who haven’t had the pleasure of playing here in the fall, let me give you the rundown.

Temperature – Around now, we’re typically talking in the upper 60’s to low 70’s.  I don’t know about you, but to me…that’s perfect.  Do you know any of those people who say “I’d rather be cold than hot?”  Well, if you don’t, you do now.  I just can’t think of anything good that comes out of a 90+ degree day.  And triple-digits?  Forget it.  There will be no golf that day.  But this time of year?  You could get me to play 36 holes easily!

Humidity – OK, I already took a shower this morning.  The last thing I want is to feel as if I stepped back into a hot shower when I walk out the front door.  You know that level of humidity where simply breathing causes you to sweat?  Welcome to July and August in Connecticut.  I do it, but again, why would you want to play golf in those type of conditions?  But around now, when the humidity level drops from nearly 100% down into the 60% area, you can walk the course all day long without breaking a sweat.

The Scenery – There’s a reason people choose to vacation in Connecticut despite the temperature dropping here.  People don’t come here for the beaches.  No, they come here because it’s beautiful.  There is nothing like the fall foliage in New England.  While most of CT’s golf courses are well maintained and provide nice scenery throughout golf season, it’s a different story in October.  The tree-lined fairways are alive with leaves changing to the reds, oranges, yellows, browns and greens of the season.  While the falling leaves may wreak havoc on your errant tee-shot, it’s a small price to pay for the golf course eye candy you can only enjoy for a short few weeks per year.  Besides, if the missing ball bothers you that much, simply cite the P.A.F. rule.

Anyway, I’m on this kick because I played out in these beautiful, perfect conditions today.  A golfer could not ask for anything more than the mostly sunny, upper 60’s with a slight breeze conditions in which we played today.  The beautiful scenery was just the icing on the cake.  So don’t look at this time of year as the beginning of the end of your golf season.  Just consider it to be saving the best for last.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Stinky Golfer Paradise Tagged With: autumn, fall, foliage, golf scenery, golf season, mark twain, New England

There’s Something Haunting in those Woods

October 31, 2012 | By Greg D'Andrea | Leave a Comment

 
 
The Haunting charm of Great River Golf Club, CT (Photo by Greg D’Andrea)

Have you ever golfed alone at the end of October in New England? Well if you haven’t, let me see if I can describe it for you:

The day will be cool – somewhere between 55 and 60 degrees Fahrenheit. There will be a chilling breeze, which will make it seem colder than it actually is. And the sky will be a deep and brilliant blue with nary a cloud in sight.

The sun will paint blonde highlights on the course, accentuating the emerald green fairways from the flaming foliage beyond. It will be quiet…and peaceful. You will place your tee in the ground at the first and realize that whenever you dream of golf from now on, you will dream of this moment.

But sight is not the only sense stimulated: As you hoist your bag onto your shoulders and begin the walk down the fairway, you’ll detect the aroma of decaying leaves. There’s something very bewitching about that earthy smell – it draws your attention to the tree-line.

Your ball lies in the fairway next to one such stretch of forest – a large grouping of Maples. They tower above you, the chlorophyll slowly draining from their extremities until a leaf finally detaches and floats down to the rough beyond your approach shot.

Below the canopy of glowing oranges, reds and yellows lies an army of trunks and twigs that sink into a carpet of more colorful foliage. A slight gust picks up just before you take your shot, which fills the sky with leaves. You pause.

If you stare too long into that darkened jumble of woodlands, you begin to see things – things that may or may not be there – is that a figure, or just an 18th Century stone wall? It’s a haunting feeling for sure – but a tranquil one as well. Though you mustn’t linger too long – the days are shorter this time of year and playing the last few holes in the dark is a somewhat eerie notion.

The putting surface is smooth – the aeration holes having disappeared more than a week before. But now you have new obstacles to contend with – those dead leaves, which seem to spring back to life in the breeze. They blow into your line as you eye your put, but if a larger gust picks up, all of them at once will race in one direction – as if the forest has summoned them home.

As you walk through the woods to the next hole, you feel an urge to veer-off the cart path and create your own trail. The forest is enchanting for sure – it silently begs you to enter and once you oblige, it’s hard to escape its enticing charms.

But that bright green patch up ahead seems to have just as much gravitational pull as the forest itself – perhaps even more. You climb out from the underbrush and stroll onto the second tee. You’ve made it. Your focus goes back to hitting that little white projectile as far and as straight as you can…

…that is, until you hook your tee shot into the adjacent woods. Take a drop or go search for it? Choose wisely.

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: autumn, fall, foliage, forest, halloween, haunting, woods

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