AND DID THOSE FEET (get wet) (Halifax Golf Club)
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Halifax Golf Club |
https://www.halifaxgolfclub.co.uk/ |
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Type of course |
Moorland |
18 holes |
Par 70 |
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Course distance |
White 6132 yds |
Yellow 5740 yds |
Red 5233 yds |
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Holes |
5 x Par 3 |
11 x Par 4 |
2 x Par 5 |
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Played: |
26/05/22 |
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Claim to Fame: Around 1912
changes were made to the course by Dr Alistair McKenzie, the man who designed
Augusta National! |
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What do the cost of living and my handicap have in common?
Answer.
They are both spiralling out of control, unchecked!
The next question you would all want to ask is, why is this
happening? Surely, a high handicapper, with a semblance of hand eye coordination
couldn’t possibly go any higher?
Don’t be fooled my friends, it’s easily done. The
introduction of the ‘All England Golf App’ sees results entered differently in
this day and age. No longer the need for a home club competition, with
additional payment, not when you can just go to the app, get a partner to
attest the score and bingo, your score is inputted, or is that shafted?
As ever in golf there is an acceptance that a high level of
moral certitude exists amongst those playing. Unlike a recent story I overheard.
It appears a player participating in the monthly medal had a disaster early in
his round but wanted to carry on playing. His buddies on the course agreed he could card a double bogey and continue. Having
completed the round, he presents the card and low and behold wins the division
competition. Now I am no golf expert but that my friends, is moral turpitude of
the highest degree, or if you like, downright cheating, made worse by the corroboration
of others.
Problem is the Halifax Hangman currently has his own
problems, as he is suffering the same trials and tribulations that I am.
Many moons ago, in the throes of a wet, windy day on the winter
tees, said Judge suggested that Team Wednesday take a trip over the border and
participate in his ex-clubs Senior BB. Sat huddled in our club house with hands
wrapped around warming lattes, nods of approval were given. Hurrah shouted the
many and to see the nightlife of Halifax, a few considered a stopover, with the
opportunity of playing the following day.
Two evenings pass and eight names are placed in the hat, as
the Judge and the Right Honourable Mrs Judge perform over the kitchen table.
The Beau and Handy
The Metronome and the Judge
The Builder and the Bandit
and the Wormburner and Kryton.
Many place the date in their electronic diaries, a few make
note in their mini filo faxes and the odd luddite uses slate board and chalk
hung on the kitchen wall.
Instantly forgotten about, said eight, continue their
golfing journeys of enlightenment .
To ensure many a pound is banked in pro shops across the
country, the Builder and the Bandit unlock the local competitions.
The Metronome continues to do what he does, with his usual je
ne sais quoa.
The Burnley Beau, courtesy of Handy Andy and partner, finds true love, and his game returns to the fruitful years of the young buck, who once hit a blind tee shot at the 9th and recorded a hole in one. I don’t think he’s ever told anyone about that you know!
Kryton continues to forge forward with his high level of
professionalism, confidentiality and ball searching addiction.
Handy has continued to pocket the pounds, regardless of the
handicap he is given and me and the Judge, well the less said the better.
As Halifax rears up on the horizon, a late change is made to
the team. The Beau, having returned from 4 days golfing in Portugal is struck
down by the dreaded Omicron and is quickly replaced by the Consonant Kid, wh ls
hvng rtrned frm 4 dys n Prtgl s mcrn fr.
With the form they were in, Team Bandit were odds on
favourites. Team Handy with quality scores under his belt and the late
replacement of the Consonant Kid were forecast to run them a close second. Team
Metronome, courtesy of the Judge had the added benefit of home knowledge and
would undoubtedly be up there somewhere and then there was Team Kryton (me and
him).
Coming off the M62 and travelling through the metropolitan
borough of Calderdale the sat nav’ takes you through Black Dyke Mills, the
hamlet of Mountain and down Perseverance Road. With views of Bradford to die
for, the journey would have been much more enjoyable, if only you could have seen
them through the gathering gloom.
Taking a tight bend off the A629, a drive down the single-track
road that is Union Lane, brings you to the entrance of Halifax Golf Course. Here
we are met by the Judge, who having returned to his heart land, serenades us
all with his rendition of “And Did Those Feet”. Lyrics of which were very apt on the day.
Halifax Golf Course, opened in 1895 and is situated 5 miles
north of the city, in the hamlet of Ogden, from which it acquires its local
name.
Gathering in the club house for a buttie and cuppa, the
banter is jovial as last to arrive is the Consonant Kid, wh brvly ntrd th fry n
hs shrts!
The view from the clubhouse window, over what would normally be pleasant pastures seen, has a similar outlook to that of the clubhouse itself. It is dull, tired, and in need of brightening up. A look round the facilities reveal the oak beamed Great Hall is getting a lick of paint, as I would suggest should happen sooner rather than later to the bar, snooker room and locker room facilities.
With the weather unrelenting, we step out early and as we
dress accordingly, once again the dulcet tones of the Judge are heard with his
own rendering of “in ancient times” .
Varying titfers are adorned, the dappiest of all being the
Builder’s Pro quip bucket hat that resembles a trawlerman’s sow wester. The Judge
is adorned in balaclava, peaked cap and bobble hat. Did he know something we
didn’t? The Bandit always looking for the positives in the weather, douses
himself in suntan cream, or was it a water-resistant skin barrier, used to
prevent chafing? It was hard to tell.
As the bridge leading to the first tee was under repair, we take
a more circuitous walk up to England’s mountains green. Just as the wind and
rain rise to a new level of wet.
The first four sort themselves out and all drives, like
arrows of desire, appear to find the fairway. The 18th fairway that
is, as the 1st and 18th share a broad expanse. We are
next to go and all drive well, the Builder, clearly a man of principal, choosing
to take on the appropriate fairway. As we head down towards the 1st
green, the Judge appears to have
divorced himself from his teammates, is this local knowledge coming to
the fore? There is a deep desire to keep these four in sight, as who knows
where we could end up.
On the green the Bandit and the Builder adopting the language of the true professional, instantly bonding, as they discuss, line, length and pace. To listen in, it’s as if they have done this many times before and are not here just for a game. Like the delta variant of yester year, the win bug is strong in these two and they are off with a 3 pointer, Kryton grabbing 2 for us.
The 2nd at 117 yards, SI 15, is a cheeky par 3 designed
by Dr Alistair McKenzie of Augusta fame and comes with a 20-foot elevated
green. Again, the builder bags 2 and I get 2 for us after shamefully three
putting.
The 3rd SI
9, 355 yard par 4, sees you fire off a raised tee over a ditch on to a heavy
sloping fairway which runs away from the green. All perform well but some
better than others.
The 4th SI 3, 421 yard par 4, sees you return from
whence you came this time crossing two deep watercourses. Here I come unstuck
as my second disappears into the long stuff and the long stuff is not only long
but it’s also very deep. Any ball not hitting the fairway on this course will
be lost. Indeed, the Judge has related a story previously where he once lost 14
balls. Thankfully I was suitably stocked for such an eventuality.
The 5th, SI 1 a 350 yard par 4, again crosses
ditches and after a less than satisfactory shot off the tee my second bounces
off the red marker and is lost once again! The Bandit hits water, Kryton hits
the long stuff and the Builder continues to build his consistency.
The 7th at 117 yards SI 17 is an uninteresting par 3,
however club choice is important as the wind and rain smash you in the face.
Bogey for me and I forget what the others get as the rain begins to enter through
the so-called waterproofs.
At the turn we have 17 points, B and B have 22, they are flying
with their bows of burning gold but at least we are making a fist of it.
That is until we have no returns on the next three holes.
Kryton had lost his concentration and if it hadn’t been for the fear of getting
lost on the moor, he would have been off hunting balls.
I lost what little swing I had and with water seeping into
bodily crevices that it should never be in. we had sadly ceased from the mental
fight
The halfway house that sits on the side of the moor reminded me of a Scottish bothy, respite for the lost soul of the lonely rambler. The thought of a peat fired hearth providing warmth and dryness was all too appealing.
At the 11th par 3, 333 yard SI 10, the Builder noted
the rain had momentarily ceased and that, clouds unfolding, may become a
reality. Having only the gale force wind to contend with, B and B were bringing
out their spears and in the distance, we could see the glass like surface of
Ogden reservoir sitting atop the hamlet of Mixenden.
Sadly, the break in the clouds was a short lived respite and
before you knew it the stair rods closed in with a vengeance not felt before,
it was harder and wetter! The waterproofs began to release the soap suds from
many a wash and for those who wore spectacles, the self-cleaning glass certainly
wasn’t doing it for them.
At this point in time my memory begins to fade as I yearn to
be warm and dry rather than play golf. My drives had gone to shit and Kryton
summed up our experience well, “What the hell are we doing here?” he said. A
good question indeed. The Bandit did suggest that if we were ever again asked
to play in Halifax, we could always tell the Judge where to go. The dark
satanic mills had won the day.
The back nine allowed B and B to continue there unrelenting
dominance of golf opens in the north. A team in unison as they coached, cajoled
and comforted each other, whereas Kryton and myself were left adrift in a sea
of melancholy. The rain was now of Biblical proportions and showed no signs of dissipating.
With the clubhouse now in sight we came across the course signature
hole. The 17th at 163 yards has a 60 foot drop into the valley
below. Normally an iron shot, for this par 3, but not today, as the Metronome
frantically waves from below indicating a driver is required. The rain hurtles horizontally
as we all wait patiently for the Consonant Kid, t msr hs sht, for the nearest
the hole competition.
At the 18th SI 6, 419 yard par 4, we could see the Judge
was once again left to forge his own path home. Undoubtedly a silent protest
from those he had forced to undertake a four-hour ramble across Ovenden Moor in
the name of golf!
The 18th was hurriedly navigated and in the club house after the game, hands wrapped around a frothing pint of ale, score cards were shared and compared. A slight error of judgement on the back nine caused the Bandit to despair at the inadequacies of those around him but thankfully the minor damage was repaired and he and the Builder were able to depart the day on their Chariots of Fire as they once again won a tournament. As forecast the Consonant Kid and Handy came in joint second, the Metronome and the Judge languished mid table and me and Kryton saw ourselves lifted off the bottom slot by a team who didn’t complete the course. Thank heaven for small mercies.
While the oldest swingers in town discussed their
forthcoming night of debauchery and real ale drinking, others drove home in
different states of attire. The Consonant Kid once again, dnnd hs shrts, the
Metronome rode off in his Calvin Klein boxers and I went two hours damp, down
the M62.
The Builder and the Bandit departed on their Chariot of Fire
but only after they celebrated with a curry, was it the Lamb of God?
As to the golf ball count, I didn’t hit the heady heights of
14 but probably wasn’t far off, the Builder however showed his true prowess as
he proudly returned with the same ball. A true Yorkshireman.
The 18th as ever restored my faith in the game of
golf and so until the next time, I will not cease the mental fight, that is
golf.
Now let us if finish as we started with a quiz question. How many times did I refer to the hymn in this narrative? A pint for the winner.












A good read Hull, He'll and Halifax !
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