The rules were simple: every hole featured a challenge sponsored by a local shop. At the third hole, the local florist required players to tee off while holding a sunflower in their teeth. At the seventh, the craft brewery offered a "mulligan for a pint" trade that quickly became the most popular stop on the course. 🏌️ The Turning Point
The trophy—a gilded watering can donated by the garden center—went to the Bakery Birdies. They celebrated by tossing flour like confetti, much to the greenskeeper's dismay. ✨ The Aftermath local buy golf day
The morning fog clung to the fairways of the Pine Valley Club, but the energy at the registration desk was already electric. This wasn't a standard corporate tournament; it was the inaugural "Local Buy Golf Day," a charity scramble designed to pit the town’s small business owners against each other for a good cause. The rules were simple: every hole featured a
By the back nine, the rivalry between "Main Street Books" and "The Corner Deli" reached a fever pitch. Sarah, the bookstore owner, was known for her quiet demeanor, but on the 14th green, she sank a forty-foot putt that had the entire gallery—mostly local regulars and family members—roaring with excitement. 🏌️ The Turning Point The trophy—a gilded watering
The "Local Buy Golf Day" proved that while they were competitors on the street, they were one team when it came to their town.
A team of pastry chefs who brought croissants instead of protein bars.