Quantcast Monsoon Hit At The Turn - PGA Here I Come
in
Tees2Greens Home Page

Navigate This Blog

Have You Seen This?

Subscribe To This Blog

News

If you can help with equipment or funding here's a link to do so (Tax Deductabe!). All donors will be listed on The Leader Board. In addition, donating from the Reds get you a personal thank-you phone call from Thailand, Whites, a PGAHereIcome Thank-You card in the mail, Blues, a noble gift and Black, a more lavish one. For "The Whole Sha-Bang" send an email or, call 949.939.8507.

Archives

PGA Here I Come

On my 25th birthday, I guess one could say I had a minor quarter-life crisis. I wasn’t depressed, just anxious. The previous few years were incredible; was in good health, I graduated college, had a great paying job and last May (07’) moved to Southern California.

I asked myself if the life route I was on, especially career wise, was in the direction I wanted to be in. And, well, it wasn’t.

So, I saved up a little cash, and then decided to get back in-shape, obtain my amateur status and practice golf every single day. This is my story...

Subscribe To This Blog

Monsoon Hit At The Turn
Written By: Erik Tammar on Mar 13 2008
Rate This:
The journey to the course today was actually quite enjoyable. Once you get off the main road it’s about a 10 km ride through winding country roads that present pleasant views of small volcanic mountains covered in lush forest. Somewhat unexpectedly Plutaluang GC appears and there is suddenly 36 holes of golf at your disposal.

The course was designed and is operated by the Royal Thai Navy which is good because the prices are low, but, in turn, the course is not heavily funded. However, what the greens and fairways lack, the scenery makes up for. It’s one of those courses where at times you feel like you are in the middle of no-where. And, geographically speaking, you essentially are.

After the front 9 today a monsoon rolled in, soaked the course with and hour’s worth of heavy rain and everyone, even caddies left. I however stuck around and when rain stopped went back out with a new caddy. Shooting 4 over at the turn I was feeling pretty good, but the course conditions got the best of me (at one point a ball was swept away in temporary river of run-off water). Still, it was worth playing because a lot of strategizing went on for Thursday’s tournament.

The course is not terribly difficult, but there were a couple of tricky holes (on the South and East courses). A thin 240 yrd par 3, a par 4 built into a mountain side so the entire fairway slopes left. My favorite though was a 600 yrd par 5 that takes 3 shots to get on no matter how you cut-it; even with a 320 yard drive off the tee, you’d have to sail the ball over 275 yards of open water to have a chance at getting on in 2…I’m not sure Tiger could even pull it off.

The big lessoned learned today was that around the greens, like most courses here, you often have to pitch the ball because the weed-like grass grabs the club causing an inevitable “duff” if you try to chip the ball.

That’s all for now. More pictures of the course will be added on Friday, had camera issues today.

Pics below: Driving Range Shack and View from Range of Reservoir







Add to Technorati Favorites

Comments

 

TURKO said:

Erik....this is awesome stuff man.  I love your stories and it's really cool to follow your progress.  Keep it up.  I'm rooting for you man.

March 14, 2008 10:00 AM

About Erik Tammar

During the summer of 1995, at a range on a washed-out beach-day day in Cape Cod, MA a small crowd gathered as I was hitting golf balls. Some of the onlookers asked my parents when I began taking lessons…they explained this was the first time I had ever swung a club.

A month later my folks purchased a junior set of clubs and 2 lessons for me. During the next 2.5 years, from April-November, I would play as much golf as I could, mostly at my local municipal course in Schenectady, NY.

During this time period I had accomplished a number of completed rounds in the 80s (from the white tees) and played in one local Jr. PGA event. At the end of the summer of 98” I turned 16, got my drivers license, a job at Jiffy Lube, and with the exception of a few random rounds or trip to the range, I left the game of golf for almost 8 years.

I am now 25 and for about a year I have been playing on and off again. The game is totally different from my youth; clubs are bigger, my grip, the swing motion is unfamiliar, and it doesn’t help I am about 100lbs heavier.

August 16, 2007 was my birthday and I guess one could say I had a minor quarter-life crisis. I wasn’t depressed, just anxious. The past few years were incredible; was in good health, I graduated college, had a great paying job and last May (07’) moved to Southern California.

I asked myself if the life route I was on, especially career wise, was in the direction I wanted to be in. And, well, it wasn’t…

My awakening at 25 was that Life is too short, and while making money is really great, I needed to start focusing more on doing things I love, because after all, you can’t take it with you.

So, I’ve saved up a little cash, and decided that for the next year I’m going to get back in-shape, obtain my amateur status and practice golf every single day.

I will be accompanied by my good freind Evan (left) who’s jumped on board to help promote this website. I’m also hoping to meet some enthusiasts along the way to help pitch in and achieve our goal to make the PGA Tour.

Privacy Policy | Legal Statement | Advertise
© 2006-2008 Tees2Greens, Inc.