1961
During the summer of 1961, after grade 8, I had nothing planned. I wasn't going to let a lack of strategy hold me back.
During the summer of 1961, after grade 8, I had nothing planned. I wasn't going to let a lack of strategy hold me back.
I wasn't a
golfer yet. That would happen in the future. There was a nice private golf
course on the outskirts of the neighborhood where I lived. A few of my boys
decided to try our luck at caddying. There was no barrier like a job
application. The deal was to simply show up and wait in the caddy pen. It was
on the job learning as I recall. The only teaching was from someone more
experienced waiting in the pen with you.
The caddy
pen was bona fide pen. Pigs would have flown to get a spot. Hidden between the
clubhouse and the first tee, chicken wire walls held up a corrugated tin roof
which covered a dirt floor. The only amenity was bench seats painted with fast
peeling green paint. The members of the club must have been embarrassed by it.
There wasn't
a caddy manager. If a golfer wanted a caddy they simply wandered over the pen
to see who was available. It was like a scene out of the slave movie Spartacus
which was a recent award winner.
I didn't go
every day. And I didn't go at 7 a.m. when the keenest golfers teed off. I
was most likely to show up about 10 a couple of days a week. My logic was that
golfers played all day long and I'd only want to do one loop. That's the
technical term for carrying a bag for one 18 hole round of golf. Ten a.m. was
plenty early. We earned something like two bucks per loop including tip.
Early in
July when I was still a newbie, I was in the pen with my buddy Irv waiting to
get picked. We were the only caddies in the pen just then. Slim pickings for
the golfers. Lots of opportunity for us.
Suddenly a
big white and blue Oldsmobile convertible pulls up to the pen. A nice looking
man wearing a fedora, sporting a Clark Gable thin mustache and smoking a cigar
leans over and yells at us “can you guys pack doubles at Aurora this
afternoon”.
We barely
understood what he meant but notwithstanding that we jumped in the car and were
on our way.
Packing
doubles in Aurora meant we were both going to carry two golf bags for a loop at
the Aurora Golf and Country Club a private course about 40 kilometers north.
The
afternoon wasn't a total success. First of all it was very hot and carrying two
bags made it a struggle. Secondly we didn't know what we were doing. We were
not great at following the flight of balls. We often were in the wrong place
and getting in way. Needless to say we were no help with club selection or
reading greens.
The man who
picked us up used his 8 iron for most of his shots. It was the one club he had confidence
in. Now that I'm an experienced golfer I understand what a good lesson that
was. One’s feelings for the club in his hands can be as important as any other
part of the swing.
Eight iron
man was Wally Crouter who at the time was the morning host on a major local
radio station. He kept that esteemed position for 34 more years ending on
exactly his 50th anniversary at the station in 1996.
The round
ended at about 5 o'clock. We were exhausted. Mr. Crouter handed us $15 each and left us to
get home on our own. We walked out to Yonge St and took a cab back to our hood
for $4 each. When we arrived at our strip mall hang out with $11 in our pockets
we were the richest kids on the block and I'm sure we treated everyone to a
coke at least.
As that day started
my world view was pretty limited. But 10 hours later I had travelled a great
distance, met a celebrity, drove in a convertible, packed doubles, learned an
important golf lesson and took a cab all for possibly the first time in my
life. Two more days like that and I would have been ready for anything.