The ever effervescent PG Wodehouse once said that golf, like measles, should be caught young as it builds character. For it takes a strong character to hit the ball on to the wrong fairway and yell FORE instead of F--K ! Unfortunately, I missed the bus on that one and discovered the game quite late in life, which goes some way in explaining my many failings. I have been playing golf for the last fifteen years now, give or take a year or two when I ran out of balls. The word "playing", however, should not be taken literally but as a figure of speech, denoting intention rather than accomplishment. As in: going shopping without actually buying anything, or going fishing without catching any fish, or going electioneering without winning any seats (also known as the Rahul Gandhi SOP), or, as as in the case of Joe Biden, speaking without saying anything. So has it been for me. According to my life-caddy, Neerja, who accompanies me to the golf course to ensure that I don't do any bodily harm to myself with my wild swings, I spend roughly 10% of the time on the fairway, the rest of the time being spent in the bushes looking for-you got it- my balls.
I'm a human compass: it doesn't matter in which direction I aim to drive the ball-it always goes north, usually causing some minor damage, like a Hezbollah rocket. Once I almost decapitated two tourists at the Naldehra course in Shimla, and I've clobbered my good friend Yatish Sood so many times that he now goes off to his lovely retreat in Kangra whenever I'm slotted for a game. The flag on the greens is lowered to half mast whenever I'm playing. The informal economy of the Naldehra Golf Club, which is surrounded by dense forests, ravines and gullies, is largely dependent on me: I usually lose ten balls every time I stride on to the fairways, these are retrieved by the caddies at night, and sold back to me the next day at heavily inflated prices. I am proud to have created the circular economy which economists have been striving for for so long!
I have a handicap of 18, but that's only because that's the maximum of the scale; without any capping I would go off the scale, like the soprano Maria Callas when she has dined well. Which brings me seamlessly to what I've actually been meaning to write about- the peculiarities of this ancient game.
Golf was apparently invented in Scotland in the 16th century, purely by accident: a Scotsman was hitting small round stones with a stick one day and one of them went into a rabbit hole and killed the rabbit. The wife was so impressed with the free meat for dinner that she encouraged her husband to whack stones the whole day; it also got him out of her hair, and wives all over the world have been grateful to this far-sighted lady ever since. Because now golf has spread globally, it is played in 206 countries, more than the number of countries in the United Nations: the remaining ones are too small to fit in a golf course. Contrary to popular belief, it is golf and not scotch whiskey which is Scotland's biggest export. It was called golf because the Scots had used up all the other four letter words to describe the English.
As is to be expected, golf is just as peculiar as the country of its origin, where men wear skirts (you can get kilt if you laugh about it), dragons are unapologetically named after women, and the sausages are square shaped; Scotland is also the only country which is happy about global warming and rising sea levels: you see, they can sit on their cairns or sgurrs (mountains) and watch the English drown. The Mecca of golf is St. Andrews; Neerja had visited it once to watch the burly Scots playing there in their kilts. She told me that she saw more balls in one hour than what one can count in a day in a rugby locker room full of jocks. She brought me a St. Andrews golf cap; I've never worn it, it's too precious.
There are other strange aspects of this game. Golf and sex are about the only things you can enjoy without being good at it. If you hit the ball to the left it's a hook, if to the right it's a slice, if by some chance you hit it straight it's a miracle. It's the only game I know of where the chappie with the lowest score is the winner. The lower your handicap the better player you are. The more books you read about golf, the worse your game becomes. A hole-in-one is rarer than a triple century in cricket, and far more expensive because then you have to pay for the drinks. Shots are named after birds, the larger the bird-name the better the shot- birdie (one under par), eagle (two under), albatross (three under), condor (four under). I've never heard of anybody hitting a condor, because that would mean hitting a hole- in- one on a five par stretch- an impossibility. But miracles do happen, you know- who thought, for example, that BJP would win the Haryana elections? Or that the Ayodhya judgment was written by God, not judges?
If you're thoroughly confused by now, dear reader, you will realise why I hit more cows and fire engines than birdies. But I'm not giving up-didn't someone say that the greatest oak was once a little nut which held its ground?
Insanely wicked! Did Pelham Grenville Wodehouse take you under his tutelage in your youth?
ReplyDeleteIf "The Clicking of Cuthbert was Wodehouse's riot parodying fluttering love amid golfing greens, then "The Birdie in the Bush" is the Shuklan spoof on swinging clubs and bally skirts!
When was the last time you snorted us laughing gas to this strength?!
Me too. 18 handicap after 15 yrs of 'playing' off and in. Actually 30. Will love to play with you sometime in Naldehra or Annandale.
ReplyDeleteThe story is 'par'.
Outstanding ... One of your best@
ReplyDeleteJolly good,I say!what a lot of brilliant balderdash... exquisite!
ReplyDeleteOh god.... What a sleight with the pen and riotous humour! An innovative circular economy with flags and people both keeping a safe distance... This Blog is surely a Condor... Priceless mirth 😂
ReplyDeleteAnd the Ravan cartoon keeping 10 pairs of eyes focused is inimitable... His four letter word must be FLOG this game... That over time became its reverse..Golf!
ReplyDeleteThis is a laugh-a-minute riot.
ReplyDeleteAvay Shukla at his best
Lovely and exquisite! Golf described for a layman.
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ReplyDeleteHilarious! Keep it coming.
ReplyDelete(I also 'called' my handicap as 18 - as only ladies can go up to 24)
Hilarious! Love your sense of satire and comedy
ReplyDeleteGolfing or goofing...I can empathise with your antics on the course Sir. Having been there done that in a number of golf courses across the length and breadth of the country. You may like to peruse my own take on this pursuit of mine...
ReplyDelete"At first I thought this should be child's play, after all having played decent hockey in the academy where a moving ball needed to be connected and hit, and being a winger I was pretty good at that. But this small little 'dimpled devil' is a different kettle of fish altogether, as it has its own mind and enjoys putting us in our place by deciding to take the trajectory that she chooses, not where it was intended to traverse. Why am I referring to her in the feminine gender, well do I even need to explain that?"
https://senseinthenonsense.blogspot.com/2024/09/golfing-or-goofing.html
I say, old chap, not a golfer myself, but as an avid Plum fan, this piece had me rolling on the floor. Exquisite humor and writing. Jolly well done!
ReplyDeleteForgot to add that I’m borrowing the cartoon to post on a social media page. I didn’t see who did it so I can add the appropriate acknowledgment.
ReplyDeleteI'm well ahead of your 30 years. Have been whacking the ball since '79 and even now if I can manage to have it go in the intended direction, my caddie beams and thanks his luck stars that he does not need to wade into the gorse looking for the dimpled devil.
ReplyDeleteWhy on earth would any self-respecting Scot have decided to import gorse from the Highlands and plonk it all around the Nilgiris, beats me. I mean, here we have a guy (presume it was a kilted male rather than a skirted lady) who likely had such a large variety to choose from, and what he cottons on to is - GORSE!!
I once played on the Ooty course with a crotchety old caddy named Augustine who sneered his way through our 9 holes
DeleteJust brilliant!! I came upon this by accident, but will look to read more from you,
ReplyDeleteAn excellent piece on the numerous challenges of playing golf. I have always believed that there are two kinds of golfers: Those who play golf & others who play with golf! I belong to the second category.
ReplyDeleteI did read somewhere that "Golf" was coined after the game developed beyond hitting stones with sticks...it used to be called "FLOG" before someone flipped it over!
Nice one!
ReplyDeleteBrilliant ! I admire your writings. Shall look forward to meeting you during one of my frequent visits to Himachal … and perhaps display my actual handicap of remembering the strokes taken by me on the fairway !
ReplyDeleteExceptional piece of writing as always.
ReplyDeleteThis one is a hole-in-one for humor and his golf antics are par for the course. This is even funnier than his bureaucratic-bashing blogs which are uncompromising and hilarious. Who needs golf lessons when Avay's wit can help you forget those hooks, slices and laugh away those triple bogies?
I would be happy to host you a round (though in the Naldehra golf course we don't call it a "round" but an "up and down" !) of golf, Vipin. Do bring an adequate number of balls, though- my personal estimation is that the number one needs on this devilish course is half one's handicap: if your handicap is 18 then 9 will do nicely, thank you! It will be your contribution to the local circular economy.
ReplyDeleteOoooooo all that sounded so gloriously familiar & comforting. Loved it
ReplyDeleteIt is sheerly brilliant
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