A Running Group. Now They Are Getting to Grips with Golf. Reports

The JournalOctober 06, 2011

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Summary


THAT'S where I've been going wrong," exclaims Jane Macdonald. "I was aiming for the flag rather than the bird!" Her remark causes much hilarity among the small group standing in the middle of Tynemouth Golf Club's 18-hole course.

It is a Friday evening in late September and 100 yards ahead the small, white ball Jane has just successfully taken a swing at has landed on the neatly clipped green, just missing a now very irate magpie that had been enjoying a quiet moment to itself, thus bringing a whole new meaning to the golf term birdie (a hole played in one stroke under par).

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Extract


A Running Group. Now They Are Getting to Grips with Golf. Reports

It's her first real success. On the first hole a short putt that missed its mark had been met with a tongue-incheek "don't tell anybody in the club about our potential ... we've got none!" Jane and fellow Tynemouth Women's Institute (WI) members Sue Williams and Fiona Ross are 30 minutes into their first golf lesson with club professional John Mc...

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