Day 51 - [E]dinburgh (St Andrews)
A round of golf, on the Old Course at St Andrews – the home of golf – for my birthday!
This post will be a bit different to the norm. I’ll report the day as a whole, then after that, document my golf game in detail below that, for my own records and to spare those not interested in golf the need to read the whole saga.
The day dawned bleak, cold, and raining (as predicted). I had slept very poorly, tossing and turning all night with stupid ‘dreams’ playing out my organisational anxieties about my birthday arrangements. The anxious traveller really had no sleep. However, the day played out pretty much exactly as planned, so that was a wasted night of worrying. I got the bus into Edinburgh city and walked to the train station in good time. I was so early that I had time to buy a coffee and cinnamon scroll as breakfast. I got on the train, found a seat, and settled in for the trip out to Leuchars. One benefit of having gone through this process the day before was that I was relaxed about the whole process and knew what to expect as I went along. One thing I did learn was that ScotRail accepts the Eurail pass as a ticket, but their automated systems don’t recognise it, requiring manual intervention to get through ticket turnstiles and the ticket collectors to do a manual inspection.
I got off the bus into St Andrews at Grannie Clark’s Wynd (another benefit of having done this once already) and walked briskly over to the pavillion near the first tee to check in. That went fine, however, when I asked about changing the style of clubs I was renting from regular shafts to stiff shafts, the guy helping me said, “you can do that, but you’ll have to go to the clubhouse, we don’t hold stiff shafts here.” No problem, I was there very early for exactly that sort of reason. I walked down to the clubhouse in the miserable weather. It was heavily overcast, light rain, and a light breeze – classic Scottish late-Autumn weather, I’m thinking.
The Clubhouse was warm and welcoming. The guys manning the Locker Room provided me with the stiff-shafted clubs I asked for without hesitation. The rental set included 14 clubs, a carry-bag with shoulder harness, and essentially unlimited tees. I had to provide my own golf balls and hire a buggy from the starter (for £40, I think he said), if I wanted one. As I picked up the bag to head upstairs to the Pro Shop, I decided I would carry my bag for this round. It wasn’t heavy and the shoulder harness was very comfortable.
Next stop was the Pro Shop where I had long-planned to buy up some merch as souvenirs of the occasion. As you may know, I’m very much a fair-weather golfer. Normally, if it’s raining, or even just cold, I’ll stay off the course. However, on this day, that was not going to be the option. So, my merch plans involved a rain-suit (pants and jacket/top), a beanie, and rain gloves. I also needed to buy balls, of course, and I bought a copy of the yardage book for the Old Course (that I stupidly left in the locker room when I went out to play!). Having acquired my showbag full of goodies (at eye-watering, but irrelevant, cost), I headed back down to the locker room to get into my new wet weather gear (it was still raining outside), leave my stuff in the locker there, and head up to the first tee for my tee time.
When I got there, I was met by the starter (Don) and introduced to the three other guys I was playing with this day: Zach, from Perth, Western Australia; James, from Seattle, Washington; and Neimar, from Southern California. All three were probably in their mid-to-late thirties (Niemar might have been a bit older, his Phillipino heritage kept him looking young but he revealed greying hair when taking off his hat at the end of the round). Later in the round, Niemar discovered that I was turning 63 today. He fist-bumped for being 63 and hitting 280 yard drives (I’d out-driven him a few times during the round). I found out, after hitting off, that Zach played off a 1 handicap (had previously been on +3), and James and Neimar were on handicaps about 11 to 14. So, we were all well-matched for this round. None of them had played the Old Course before, though James and Niemar had met the day before, playing the New Course.
Overall, the round was great. The weather improved quite soon after we teed off to just be heavily overcast. At one stage, I actually removed my rain-proof top because I was getting quite hot inside it. That only lasted about a hole as the weather turned again, and we played through another period of light rain and wind. I had a cup of hot chocolate at the turn in an attempt to reheat myself. And by the time we were walking past the 16th hole (which was closed), it was pretty miserable again. However, it cleared up again as we went down the 17th (the famous ‘Road’ hole) and was pretty good for our finish on 18 (the ‘Home’ hole).
Zach had a good round, finishing 2-over and having carded at least one birdie. James, Niemar, and I all played fairly well, but each had at least one complete ‘blow out’ hole that meant that our score was not especially good. However, scoring aside, it was a pretty great experience. Not a Championship-standard, perfect weather, round on the Old Course, but certainly impressive and evocative enough for me. I am now anxious to watch the professionals play on the course again as I have first-hand knowledge of what they are experiencing.
We were not the quickest group around the course that day. I estimate that our round was about four hours and fifteen minutes, maybe 4:25. However, we were the last group out (it turns out) so we weren’t holding anyone up. And by the time we rounded the turn, we were practically the only people on the course (there was a group in front of us that I saw a couple of times on the home stretch, but they were well-ahead). That actually added to the experience for me. It’s a rare privilege to play on a course where you’re under no pressure and can enjoy the whole experience without interfering with other players’ game experience.
After we finished the round, Niemar had to head off directly, but James and Zach agreed to meet me in the clubhouse for an after-round beer. By the time I had handed back my clubs, got out of my rain gear, and got sorted out, they were already started on their beers! We chatted for about an hour (mostly them talking US sports) and it was a pleasant wind down after the signature round. Eventually, the anxious traveller had me saying my farewells and heading for the bus to get to the train station in time for my train. Notwithstanding that the weather was miserable again and my paper carrier bag full of merch was getting wet, the trip to the train was smooth. The train was actually delayed by about 10 minutes, but that didn’t trouble me. In Edinburgh, I went down to the bus stop that I knew I could get a bus home from and waited in the sleeting cold rain with dozens of other Edinburgh travellers for the right bus to show up. (I had arrived at the stop just as the route that I wanted left, so I had to wait 15 minutes for the next bus on that route.)
Back home, I hung up all my stuff to dry out and then headed down to the Herringbone for a light meal. With all that achieved, I read for a while and then had an early night. I was pretty tired after a longish day operating mostly on adrenaline (I think, on reflection). However, I was certainly satisfied that I’d had the birthday day that I’d long planned to have.
| Daily facts: Location: [E]dinburgh (St Andrews) Temp: 3 Weather: Heavy overcast; patches of light rain |
My Birthday Round on the Old Course
Game-play influences
It was 3C, heavy overcast, regular light winds, and occasional light rain. I was using rented Callaway Clubs (Elite woods) (in excellent condition) and Callaway golf balls. The Old Course was set in its off-season mode: Holes 3 (‘Cartgate (Out)’) and 16 (‘Corner of the Dyke’) were out-of-play; Forward/winter tees were in operation, and temporary tees appeared on 6 (‘Heathery (Out)’), 12 (‘Heathery (In)’), and 14 (‘Long’); temporary greens were operating on 6 (‘Heathery (Out)’), 7 (‘High (Out)’), 12 (‘Heathery (In)’), and 15 (‘Cartgate’); preferred lies were operating, and the club gave out little mats to use for shots from the fairway to preserve the grass.
I hadn’t swung a golf club in four months! I was wearing walking shoes (which I’ve fallen in love with this trip), which are waterproof and have grippy soles, but are not strictly golf shoes. I didn’t track my score as it happened and record it here now from (vivid) memory. Yardages were from my Arcoss app, until it got confused and I closed it (about hole 12, I think). Then I used the yardages shown on sprinkler heads through the course.
My Round
By my count, that’s 71 shots (including 3 penalties – lost ball and unplayable lie). Add 9 to account for the two holes not played, and I’ve shot ~80 around the Old Course. Over my handicap but not a disgrace by any means. Especially with someone else’s clubs, in inclement weather, and after four months lay-off.


























What a memorable 63rd birthday! 🎉 🎂🥳🎈🎁
ReplyDeleteOops, forgot to change the name from Anonymous … it’s Fi wishing you a happy birthday
DeleteThanks, Fi. It was a memorable birthday and it ticked off another 'bucket list' item.
DeleteI imagine a few golfers would be jealous of the opportunity that you had to play at St Andrew’s.TT
ReplyDeleteYep, I reckon so. Interestingly, the whole process was unbelievably straightforward. The biggest hurdles to overcome are getting there and getting lucky in the draw.
Delete