Welcome

Welcome to our first experiment with a blog. We'll use the space to update you on our family, our passions, our travels and our projects. It will all be colored by our view -- from the 11th hole. We hope you enjoy your visits here as much as we expect to enjoy updating the site for you.
--Susan and Don

Monday, June 29, 2009

We experience Augusta mystique

Our trip to a Masters practice round on April 6 at Augusta National Golf Club was the result of our efforts ever since we retired in 2001. We have long wanted a peek at the famous venue but knew tickets to the actual competition were out of the question.

The course is even more spectacular than it looks on television, with more dramatic changes in elevation than TV reveals. The plantings are truly magnificent with over 1600 azalea bushes on the 13th hole alone. The land had been a nursery before Bobby Jones and Clifford Roberts bought and developed it into the famous course with its formal opening in January 1933. “There are over 30 varieties of azaleas, several strains of dogwood and dozens of varieties of ornamental shrubs on the grounds,” according to the Spectator Guide. The pines, dogwood, redbuds and countless other varieties reflect the hole names, each a different plant – from #1 Tea Olive to #18 Holly.

Walking through the course, we not only were struck by the beauty of the course and the lack of commercialism but also by the feeling we were walking on hallowed ground, sharing it with the golfing greats from past and present alike. Volunteers we talked with cited Jack Nicklaus’ surge in 1986 – at age 46 – to win his sixth Masters as their most memorable Masters moment.

Yes, we have a goal of returning. The accompanying video attempts to give you the same emotional feeling we experienced. We hope you enjoy it.