Friday, May 30, 2014

Rant 13 January 28, 2010

Yes, I like baking.  Not the sit on Manley Beach in August watching the girls get brown, kind, although that’s not bad, but the butter, flour, yeast kind.  Right now my first attempt at Pain au Chocolate is in the oven and I am a bit distressed about how it is likely to turn out.  I will let you know the result later.  An immediate flash however for those of you who have never made bread from scratch by hand; its hard work!  Never take a croissant, brioche or baguette for granted again.  But that is not what this is about.

In addition to my culinary worries, I was also sitting by the window, watching the snow drift up and the temperature drift down and ruminating darkly like some Shakespearean King on the state of things in general.  Only my weather is worse than either Denmark or England.  Suddenly I was shocked out of my melancholia by the following note from my friend Sam Sanderson.  Sam is my oldest and dearest friend.  Although our relationship over the years has periods when we have suffered from over-familiarity, I have always retained my great respect and affection for him.

Bob - thought you might like this as you've played Waterville, perhaps know Higgins as well.  How are you?
Sam

Learning the long ball from one of golf's great characters
Posted at 7:41 PM by Connell Barrett |
A good yarn from a legendary Irish ballstriker
I couldn't resist a second post on the charming Liam Higgins, the European Tour winner and longtime head pro at Waterville Golf Links, in Southwest Ireland. I spent two days with him this week. He's one of golf's great characters, brimming with vivid stories.

Many club pros can't break 80. Higgins still breaks 70. Back in the day, he had the gift-wrapped talent to hang with the likes of Hogan, Miller, Palmer. He won from time to time but never found fame outside Ireland. He could have. He could been a contender. Still, Higgins, 67, hasn't a whisper of regret in his voice when he says, "I could play with the best of them, and yes, I could have won majors, could have won a lot more than I did. But I guess I wanted other things. I wanted to go fishing. I wanted to play for fun. I didn't feel that drive to fight it out every week. I'd win one week, then take a month off. It's just who I am." (Higgins made the 1977 Ryder Cup team but withdrew after breaking a rib in  
a car crash before the competition.)






For an old Irish pro, his looks are straight-from-central-casting: rickrack teeth, rosy cheeks, brow like a Ruffles potato chip. Slight of stature, he can still crank it 300 yards--and you should have seen him in 1968, when when he took on the reigning long-drive champion. Relaxing in the Waterville clubhouse earlier this week, waiting out a wicked storm, Higgins remembers:
"I was just in my teens. A mere child. I used a persimmon club with a steel shaft that bent like a fishing pole. I could really hammer it. I didn't know when it was coming down or where it was coming down. Some well-off Americans saw me driving and they flew me to New York for a contest against Dick Parlow, the long-drive champion. I'd never left Cork [in the south of Ireland], where I grew up. I was scared to death to be away from home at that age. I get off the plane and there are two huge African-American men waiting to pick me up. I was so sheltered that I'd never seen a black fellow in my life. Turns out, one of them was Joe Louis, the boxer! He knew the fellow putting on the match. The contest was at Westchester Country Club [near New York City]. Parlow was 6'10''. Massive! We're at a 380-yard hole. We can hit as many drives as we want, and the longest ball wins. There are 300 people watching. I'm so homesick, I just want it to be over. I want to go first. The coin-flipper liked me. He says on the sly, 'Call it in the air, and no matter what, I'll say you won [the toss].' Wouldn't you know I 'won' the flip. I took one swing, flew the ball 350 yards, and it reached the back of the green, 380 yards out. I said, 'I'm done. I can't do better.' Well, Parlow drops his bag of balls and walks away, without so much as one swing. That's all it took. Just one swing!"  

I was surprised that Sam had to ask if I knew Higgins since Liam figures prominently in one of my favorite Irish episodes and I would have thought that Sam would have been bored to tears already by having heard the story repeatedly.  The only Hansford tale that Sam is likely to have heard more often is The Duck Story which recounts Sam’s legendary prowess with a shotgun in Alaska, but that one is for another time.  The Liam story is so much one of my favorites that I was just telling it to my son Jason a couple of weeks ago.

It was 4:00 AM and I was sitting in my tiny hotel room on Marion Square in Dublin feeling sorry for myself.  I was tired, having just arrived from Calgary the evening before and having sat up all night trying unsuccessfully to get to sleep.  And trying unsuccessfully to find something worth watching on RTE, (Sorry Eugene).  The hotel had been booked by the Canadian travel agent and the room is so small that it reminds me of the nights I spent in my Volkswagen camper in the Alaskan Bush.  The only thing that the room had to commend it was that it had its own bathroom and I did not have to walk down the hall.  But using the facilities also reminded me of taking care of business on the chemical porta-potty that came with the VW van.  All in all, I was not happy, camper or otherwise. 

It was my first time in Ireland and I did not know a soul.  Not knowing anyone has been the case many times in my life and most often, as with Ireland, it has led to some great adventures and some great people.  However, believing that does not erase the sadness, fear and isolation that you are bound to feel when you are far from home and all alone. 

I have learned, however, that you cannot wait for people to knock on your hotel room door.  Although one of my friends did show me one time that if you look under escort services in the phone book and make some calls, sometimes they will. 

I figured I had to do something.  I had known and liked a lot of people of Irish descent over the years.  I found out that it was not surprising most were not living in country since only about 6 million people live in the Republic and Northern Ireland but the Irish Diaspora around the world is estimated at between 50 and 100 Million.  With that many Irish living in other countries, there may be something to the idea that God invented whiskey to keep the Irish from ruling the world.

I decided that I would try to look up the only Irishman I knew who was actually living in Ireland.  The only problem was that I did not actually know him.  Patrick O’Connor and I had met at dinner in the Post Hotel at Lake Louise, Alberta the winter before my first trip to Dublin.  The problem was that this was the only time I met him and we had shared dinner with 25 others.  Patrick was really more precisely an acquaintance of a friend.  Even I would admit, all in all, a rather tenuous connection.  But I had liked what little I was able to share with Patrick and had learned that we both had a passion for golf.  Patrick had developed a golf course in Ireland called Old Head and he was recruiting members.  A golf course owner, really, how bad a guy could he be?

Patrick was a member of a group of 15-25 individuals from all over the globe who shared a love for heli-skiing and joined in an annual ski trip to the Canadian Rockies.  They did a week of heli-skiing at various locations mostly in BC.  My real friend, Peter Grey, was also a member of this group and had not missed a trip in over 20 years.  Peter and his family live in Sydney where he and his partner Brent Potts have built a very successful investment business.  Those of you, who have actually read these rants, know how fondly I hold both Peter and Brent and how much I appreciate the many kindnesses Peter and his family have showed me over the years. 

The year before I first went to Ireland, I had been working in Calgary and had made an effort to meet Peter on his ski trip.  That is how we ended up at dinner with Patrick, Peter and the rest of the group.

At 5:00 and still awake, I sent Peter an email and asked him if he had a number for Patrick and would he mind if I contacted him?  Peter told me that Patrick actually spent most of his time living in the South of France but he thought he did have a place in Ireland as well.  He did have a cellular number, which he shared with me.  A bit later that morning, I called the number and reached Patrick on the first try.  I do not think he actually remembered me but of course knew Peter from the skiing.  Patrick said he was in Ireland at the time and after a bit of a chat he invited me down to his house in Kerry for dinner and a game or two of golf at their club Waterville.  Not knowing where Kerry was from Dublin, I said I would hire a car and drive over on that coming Friday.  Patrick said he was on the exact other side of the country and that in fact he was looking at the ocean and if he jumped in a started swimming the next thing he would hit was New York.  He suggested that I fly to the Kerry airport and hire a car there to drive to his house in Ballinskelligs.

(Ballinskelligs (Baile na Sceilge) is situated in the Gaeltacht, an Irish speaking area on an attractive bay facing the larger resort of Waterville across the water. The area is renowned for its miles of golden beach and turquoise water. The area has its own Irish College, where children come in summer to learn the Irish language. The area has a unique history and culture and was the land base for the monks that lived on Skellig Michael)

I asked for directions to his house but he said it was just too complicated for the phone and that once I got to Ballinskelligs I should ask anyone for directions to Boolliskeaolichivouvkish House.  I did not quite catch the name but wrote it down phonetically as best I could.  He also gave me his Irish cellular number but said it did not always work since the coverage in the area was somewhat spotty.  It was all agreed I would see him for dinner on Friday. 

I finally went to sleep feeling much better about having something to look forward to doing and someone to get to know better.  When I looked at my note the next day, I was a bit worried about the name of his house.  The phonetics I had parsed out looked more like the name of a Russian Eskimo village than a small fishing settlement in Ireland.  Those of you who have lived in Alaska and tried to spell some of the Eskimo village names will know what I am talking about, they seem impossibly long and mostly filled with consonants.  In any case, I did have his cell number so I booked the flight.

I heard that when Alaska was first made a state in 1957 that the US Geological Survey  (USGS) who was responsible for mapping Alaska, decided that since many of the Eskimo village names such as Nunapitchuk, Qagun Tayagungin or Kwigillingok were so difficult to pronounce, they would translate them into their English meanings.  It just seemed that it would be easier in the future for those using the maps.  However once the project was fully funded and staffed they found out that most of the names meant things like “Where the Caribou Shit” and “Two Bears Fucking” so the effort was immediately abandoned.  Tom Jensen, the greatest storyteller of all time, may have told me this so it could all be bullshit, but I believed it at the time.

I took the first flight to Kerry and arrived in time to rent the last car available at the airport.  It was some kind of tiny ford, in fact it made a standard VW look like a stretch limo, but as I was to come to understand, when it comes to driving in Kerry, smaller is better.  I will not bore you with pages and pages of how bad the roads are in Ireland generally and Kerry specifically but will say that I have been on US Forest Service fire trials that were in much better shape than most Kerry roads.  Some new roads in Ireland are quite nice but most are designed to be 1 1/3 wagon-widths wide.  This creates some concern when meeting an oncoming car around a blind corner at speed.  And most of the corners are blind.  There are also very few, if any highway direction or route number signs.  I think the Irish share the Australians’ belief that, “if you do not know where you are going then you do not belong there”.  For all their fine qualities the one thing that the Aussies cannot do is give directions.  I do not know if this is some kind of genetic defect but I found it to be absolutely true in every corner of Australia and it is a trait that they share with the Irish.

One way to know how far west you are in Ireland is to look at the few public signs you do find.  In Dublin and the east all the signs are in English.  Once you reach about 2/3s of the way across the country they are in both English and Gaelic.  I cannot think that Gaelic and Eskimo share a common root but they both have a fondness for very very long words and a paucity of vowels.  You will know when you have arrived in western Kerry when they dispense with English on the signs.  That is what I was confronted with when I finally arrived in Ballinskelligs.  The trip had taken much longer than I had thought since I had been lost several times and had to drive so slowly due to road conditions.  It was not yet dark but it was not long before sundown and I vowed not to even attempt to drive anywhere in Ireland after dark, certainly not in Kerry.

If I said that Ballinskelligs was a not a big place I could be leaving you with a very large misconception.  Reno is not a big place and it is tens of thousands of times bigger than Ballinskelligs.  The only non-residential structures I could see were a small church and a pub, neither of which was open nor occupied.  The only people about were two guys who were changing a flat on what I took for a telephone repair van.  I was not sure since the lettering on the van’s side was in Irish but there was what appeared to be a rendition of a telephone.  I tired my cellular but had no signal.  I approached one of the telephone guys and asked if he knew the location of Boolliskeaolichivouvkish House.  I figured I had butchered the pronunciation so I added the name Patrick O’Connor.  He turned to his partner and said something in what must have been Gaelic.  They jabbered back and forth for a bit and I though; “great, now what?”  In an accent I had difficulty following but which was definitely English, he said, John O’Connor and quickly gave me a complex set of directions.  I quickly wrote down what I thought he had said and then repeated with emphasis, “PATRICK O’CONNOR”.  He shook his head in agreement, said John O’Connor and repeated the directions.

I had little confidence but also little choice so I followed the indicated road down past two turning; just beyond a ruined church and ancient graveyard I turned right up the hill.  I immediately figured I had the wrong course since the road narrowed so severely that the heather was scraping the car on both sides and I had no idea what I might do if I met someone coming the over way.  But I did not, and I was able to take the third left at the top of the hill.  Here the country opened up a bit and there were  open moors on both sides.  I went the instructed ½ mile but found not a single dwelling.  I did pass what looked to me like the entrance to a government park of some type.  It had a paved drive with two large stone monoliths on each side of the entrance.  I looked carefully but, surprise, surprise could not see any signage.  The entrance looked like what you would expect to see at Yellowstone or some other National Park in the American West.  I kept going for another couple of miles without finding any habitation.  I figured I had understood the directions wrongly and decided that if I could find a caretaker at the park, he might know how to direct me.  I tired the cell again and while I was getting an intermittent signal I was unable to connect with Patrick’s number.

I turned around and went back to the ‘park’.  Still no sign but the road was in best shape of any I had encounter so far in Kerry and I drove along for about another ½ a mile of so.  The road crested a hill and gave out into a pretty fair sized graveled parking area.  There was a fantastic view of the ocean and through a light mist a look at the coast drawing away along the left hand side.  There was a very large and obviously quite old structure and a number of out buildings made of what looked like the local stone.  I was the only car in the lot and no one was stirring.  I got out and walked out to the front of the large structure, which was facing the beach about a quarter mile away.  There were quite extensive gardens, which covered most of the ground down to the coastline. 

The building was kind of a cross between a very large house and a castle.  I could not tell how old it was but it obviously had been there for a very long time but was currently occupied since all the windows were modern and the entire structure fully enclosed and secure.  The entrance was comprised of very old and very thick wooden planks that were placed to form two sides of a large curved portal.  They were locked and bolted shut.  The doors looked like something you would see in an Errol Flynn production of Robin Hood.  I felt a bit foolish standing before these 12 foot doors with no bell or knocker that I could find.  The only thing left to do was shout “Hello the House” at the top of my lungs in the hope of getting someone’s attention.  This I was unwilling to do.  I walked around the entire structure without seeing any signs of life and decided to return to the village.  Just as I was getting into my car another vehicle drove up and parked right next to me.

There was only the driver and as he got out I give him a big smile and a hearty hello.  He responded with a fairly non-committal “Geuten Abend”.  Shit!  Just my luck to finally find someone and they only speak German.  But that’s the way it goes sometime.  Fortunately. I had studied a little German in college and had lived in Germany for a few months during the winter of 70-71.  That was back when I had this vision of becoming a noted professor of philosophy reading Hegel and Heidegger in the original and pontificating to the adoring students.  That was before I actually sat down and tried to read Hegel in the original.  The selection I randomly picked went on in a single sentence for three pages and was so utterly impenetratable, even with a translation dictionary, that I quickly decided to become a whizz bang telephone marketing guy instead of a Philosopher. 

I had not had much practice with my German in the intervening 30 years and was a bit rusty but was able to determine that my new arrival was a cook and had gone to town for ingredients for a dinner he was going to prepare for the house’s owner.  When I enquire if this was Patrick O’Connor he agreed and said John O’Connor.  He let me into the house through the kitchen entrance and then began to prepare dinner.  We were struggling a bit on our communications but he indicated that the owners should be home before too long and that I should wait.  He was targeting dinner for 9:00, which was still some 3 hours away. 

The inside of the home was just spectacular.  It was filled with furniture that looked old, comfortable and expensive.  There was a large peat fire burning in a big open-hearth fireplace in a two story great hall with open beam ceilings.    I wandered through the ground floor rooms somewhat in awe of the size and the furnishings.  I got to thinking that I had never really got a firm answer that this was in fact Patrick O’Connor’s house but each time I had asked had been answered with yes, John O’Connor.  It also occurred to me that although there were not many residents in the Ballinskelligs area, the name O’Connor was probably not particularly uncommon in Ireland and that there was a very good chance that there was more than one O’Connor, even in Ballinskelligs.  I got to speculating how it would appear to an unrelated O’Connor to come home and find me unescorted and uninvited; standing in his home, after having apparently misrepresented myself to his German speaking cook.  I decided that explaining my somewhat tenuous connection with Patrick O’Connor to an irate homeowner or the Kerry police was not the way I wanted to start my stay in Ireland.  I had the cook write down the landline phone number for the house and told him I was leaving but would call in a couple of hours. 

Since there was no hotel in Ballinskelligs, I drove to Waterville about ten miles away and fortunately over reasonably good roads.  Since I had no reservations I simply drove to the biggest building in town which turned out to be the Butler Arms Hotel.  The parking lot was full and I had trouble finding a spot.  I got to worrying that, even though it was not the height of the tourist season, the hotel might be full.  I was tried and did not want to go hunting a room.  So, while it has seldom worked in the past, I figured I would bluff having a reservation.  I went to the check-in and of course the host asked if I had a reservation.  I said I though my friend Patrick O’Connor had made one for me.  He immediately brightened and asked, are you a friend of Patrick’s?  Given the situation, I answered with some trepidation, yes.  He said, “You just missed him” “I was having a drink in the bar with him and his brother John but they just left for Ballinskelligs.”  Well that solved the mystery.  I figured I had time for a quick shower and still get back to Patrick’s for dinner at 9:00.  My host, who turned out to be the owner of the hotel, said he did not have a reservation for me but there was no problem.  The hotel bar did a land office business on Friday nights, explaining the full parking lot.  The owner asked if I wanted a regular of a deluxe room.  Given that the place in Dublin was charging me 150 Euro a night for a dump that I though was not worth a 1/3 of that, I figured I had better get the upgraded room regardless of expense.  I just could not spend another night in a camper sized accommodation.  After all how much could they charge in the off-season in the “back of beyond”, Ireland? 

I followed the owner up a number of stairs and through several corridors before arriving and a room door a very long way from the front desk.  He opened the door, thanked me for my business, wished me a pleasant stay and said he had to get back to the bar.  I walked into a quite large and very nicely appointed suite.  There was a small entrance vestibule and a sitting room with fireplace to the right with a large bedroom to the left.  From the bedroom there was the door to a bathroom almost the same size as the bedroom itself with a heated marble floor and thick towels on heated racks.  Through the sitting room was a door opening onto a fairly good-sized balcony overlooking the beach and the ocean right across the road fronting the hotel.  I thought, shit, given what they are charging me for the dump in Dublin this has got to cost thousands per night.  But I was tired enough that it did not matter.

After a quick clean up and a talk with Patrick I drove back to Ballinskelligs to a wonderful dinner with the O’Connor family.  The two brothers along with their sister and a cousin of some sort were at table and they could not have been more charming.  What a delightful dinner and the food was excellent.  We made an early night of it and agreed to meet early at the Waterville Golf Club the next day for a round.  I went to bed that night well satisfied with life in general.

The next morning I awoke to a raging gale.  The wind was lashing the rain vertically across the road from the bay, rattling my windows and finding enough openings to make a continual ululating moan.  Did not look like much of a day for golf but as most of you know, weather does not often put me off a round.  Any of you who question this should ask Jimmy Dennnihan.  Jimmy and I played Ballybunion once in one of the worst storms I have ever seen and I imagine he is still telling the story of how a gust of wind had to blow me on my ass before we were prompted to call it quits after only nine.  Billy McConnell just wishes we had quit after nine at The European Club one time when the freezing rain was dripping off both our noses while we were standing on the 16th tee and still had three holes to go before we could get out of the storm.

Patrick, John and I finished a round that day but none of us would have said we really enjoyed it.  I still have three wind shirts and jackets from Waterville that I bought that day and I wore them all.  We ended up cold and soaked but the outlook for Sunday was for much fairer weather so we made a date for the next morning.  Patrick said that they had invited a few friends over for dinner that evening and asked if I would join them.  I accepted of course and met at the Ballinskelligs house at 8:00 that night.  What followed was one of the most enjoyable evenings I have ever spent. 

I was seated next to the Waterville Golf Club pro Liam Higgins who had just arrived in town that afternoon from Tralee.  Seldom have I met a more engaging fellow and Liam regaled me all night with tales of his exploits and the legends of Ireland.  He viewed himself as quite a swordsman and related some of his many amorous adventures.  It was with some bemusement that about a hour later I listened to Liam relate with tears roiling down his cheeks how his wife had broken his heart one time in the bar and the Butler Arms by allowing another man to buy her a drink.  I think he old rogue actually did feel betrayed. 

The evening was capped off with a songfest in which each of the diners did a rendition of their favorite ballad.  As genetically handicapped as the Irish may be directionally, they are certainly genetically gifted when it comes to singing.  How everyone except me can be so musically talented is a mystery.  But my rendition of “Home, Home on the Range” was mercifully short and I got to enjoy longer performances from the rest.  All in all a very memorable and well-appreciated evening.  Some Irishmen have been known to take a drink or two and if I had been drinking in those days, I might still be there, buried in some small corner of the garden.  As it was, I left a bit early but with sobriety intact.

The next day delivered the promise of the forecast and was a fine soft day with no rain.  We were joined on the third hole by Liam who had taken the opportunity to catch up on a bit of his sleep from the night before.  My understanding was that he had gallantly agreed to escort one of the other guests home after the festivities and had not arrived at his own home until quite early in the morning. 

Playing with Higgins is a real treat.  He was in his late 50s at the time but could still knock the ball a country mile.  I got to hear a number of his stories from his days as an actual player on the Irish professional circuit.  When we reached the 366-yard, par 4 16th  hole, Liam announced that he had scored a hole-in-one on this hole some years before.  I must have appeared a bit skeptical to him.  This was far from the truth, I did not believe him at all and figured this was another of his endearing but obviously untrue tales.  Liam, sensing my incredulity, kept building the detail of his feat as we progressed down the fairway where upon finally reaching the green he turned and pointed out a plaque set into a stone right next to the putting surface which commemorated “Liam’s Ace”.  Sometime skepticism, however well founded, is misplaced.  Perhaps Liam has also slept with every female over the age of 18 in Kerry but I will stick with my amazement at his hole in one on a 300+ yard hole.  You cannot see the green of the 16th from the tee and Liam related that the group in front of them was still on the green and putting out when his ball rolled onto the green, through the legs of another golfer and fell into the hold.  Apparently the Albatross, (three under par), did not go unrewarded, Liam set the course record with the round he shot that day.

As I was driving back to the Butler Arms from Patrick’s house on Sunday, I could not help but think that I could not have had a better or more enjoyable introduction to Ireland.  I thought that the weekend boded well for my time in the country.  And I was right.  I went on to meet some truly wonderful people and have a fabulous experience in all things Irish.

I was a bit worried about checking out of the hotel but figured that even at a 1,000 Euro a night, I had had great value.  At the front desk, I opened my statement with some reluctance.  I thought 80 Euro a night was pretty good value, in fact, Waterville was the best value I have ever received in a hotel.  That is, unless you count the time in Thailand, but that was really the value of the other amenities.

Thanks to my many friends in Ireland for your kind hospitality toward me and thanks to Sam for letting me relive some very enjoyable memories.  Hope you are all well and enjoying life to the fullest.  I will keep you posted on the baking.



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