Saturday, June 26, was the finale of the Disc Golf World Championships in Utah. It was also the day that Joshua Luiz’s son Clayton was born.
Clayton’s mother, Samantha Thurman, was two weeks past due when she and Luiz checked into the hospital that morning. Thurman was induced and Luiz was exclusively focused on her health and well-being. (Don’t worry, this is not one of those stories where an absent-minded father is neglecting his partner or newborn to watch DA BIG GAME.)
Clayton was born at 1:51 p.m. the new parents basked in the presence of their big boy — 10 pounds, 6 ounces! — and then mom drifted off to sleep.
So Luiz held his newborn, and yes, he put the World Championships on his phone. The games had been canceled last year because of COVID-19, and Luiz was pumped to tune in while he passed the time with Clayton.
“I really got into disc golf in the last year,” he told me Monday from McKinleyville, California, where he and Thurman live. “This is the first time I’ve been able to watch the championships live. I wasn’t planning on watching it, but the way things worked out, he was born at the perfect time and we were hanging out in the room when it happened.”
“It” is in italics for a reason. I do not follow disc golf closely, so I am partially relying on Luiz’s narration here, but I also watched the clip in question, and it is indeed one of the wildest sports scenes I’ve ever witnessed.
The world championships came down to two players: Paul McBeth, whom Luiz refers to as the Tom Brady of disc golf, and James Conrad, the underdog. On hole 18, Conrad basically had to nail a 247-foot birdie to stay alive. “It seemed like McBeth was walking away with it,” Luiz recalls. Conrad released his Hail Mary attempt. “It just floated,” Luiz says, “and the whole time it was in the air I was saying, ‘Oh no, no way!’ When it went in, I went, ‘Oh my God! Oh my God!’ I had my son in my hands and a couple of nurses came running in asking if everything was OK.”
Or, as he texted a friend: “It was insane bro. Best worlds ever… I screamed when it went in [and] all the nurses came in thinking something was wrong.”
Nothing was wrong. Most importantly, he did not wake up Clayton or mom Thurman, who does not remember any of this.
McBeth and Conrad are playing off right now. Watch live here: https://t.co/P2hGISEaDQ pic.twitter.com/Rtqf27Vhqu
— Disc Golf Pro Tour (@DiscGolfProTour) June 27, 2021
Conrad went on to win the title. The family is back home; Thurman is doing well, and so is Clayton. Luiz would love for Clayton to give disc golf a try someday — if he’s interested in it, anyway. And even if he isn’t, his dad’s disc golf freak-out will almost certainly be brought up for years to come.
Plus, Luiz can now make an unusual, difficult-to-disprove claim: He is the first person to ever alarm hospital workers because he was yelling about a disc golf shot.
“I’m sure they didn’t quite understand the moment,” he says. “I’m just very glad I didn’t wake up mom, because she definitely would not have understood what was going on.”
WILTON — Wilton is moving forward with renovations at some parks & recreation facilities funded by Judith Bjorn’s $100,000 donation.
The Wilton Select Board authorized Parks and Recreation Department Director Frank Donald to spend up to $38,600 on renovations for the basketball courts at Kineowatha Park.
Donald was authorized to spend the funds on purchases of poles, backboards and paving for the court.
Donald anticipates they will enlist students at Foster Career and Technical Education Center to build the six poles. The town has previously enlisted Foster Tech students for other projects.
Donald said this is a plus for the students, town and community.
For the town, it saves quite a lot of money, Donald said in an interview. And it allows those kids to get some practical experience, take on different kinds of projects, he added.
Donald said that it gives the students “a sense of pride in the community.”
Bjorn donated $100,000 to the town’s parks and recreation department in December.
Bjorn told the town that she wanted the money “to be used to support your expensive programs for youth and families” and “enhance and continue [the parks and recreation department’s] excellent programs.”
The parks and recreation department then conducted an online survey to gauge what community members wanted the town to spend Bjorn’s donation on.
Donald said that of the 87 responses, 29 voted to renovate the courts and 27 voted to build a pavilion in the center of Kineowatha Park.
Other options included maintenance funds for upkeep on the disc golf course and lighting for the tennis and pickle ball courts. Some respondents also suggested work to improve the steep hill leading to the beach at Kineowatha — though Donald said there are some complications with that idea.
Donald currently has full approval for spending on the courts — barring some limits on paving.
He anticipates the new poles and backboards will be installed by late May and hopes the paving will be completed by the end of August.
Donald will return to the board in the future with solidified ideas and quotes for work on the pavilion.
In other business, Wilton is reopening the Share Shack at its transfer station. The announcement was made at the Select Board’s Tuesday, Feb. 4, meeting.
Selectperson Tom Saviello anticipates the Share Shack will reopen April 1. The date of the opening hinges on approval of a set of rules for the shack by the select board.
The Share Shack first opened in 2010 with the intent “to take usable items out of the waste stream for individuals who need them.”
The Town of Wilton’s website currently states that acceptable items include wooden furniture, housewares, tools, building materials and children’s toys. Among unacceptable items are air conditioners, dehumidifiers, glass doors, grills, large appliances, mattresses and box springs, stuffed or upholstered furniture, televisions and computer monitors.
The town closed the shack down at the beginning of the pandemic due to restrictions. It reopened in 2021 and closed again in November 2021 due to concerns of misuse.
At the board’s Nov. 11 meeting, Public Works Foreman John Masse explained the station has had issues with people dropping off “unacceptable items” and creating “pretty much a disaster” despite having “posters everywhere saying what you can and can’t put in.”
At the November meeting, Selectperson Tiffany Maiuri also said she’s seen people “hoarding” items, selling them at yard sales.
The board decided then to close the shack, review the policies, clean it out and figure out how to move forward.
Saviello told the board at the Feb. 15 meeting that the recycling committee is going to write up a set of rules that put limitations on donations and usage.
Saviello told the board the anticipated rules include barring more than one visit to the shack a day and the donation of items that are wrapped in boxes. He also suggested a policy that they clear out items that have been in the shack for a prolonged period of time.
However, Saviello was clear to say they would not to do anything to prevent Share Shack items from being taken and sold at yard sales.
Saviello added in an interview that the committee also plans to have a town employee oversee and approve what people put in the shack.
Saviello will return to the board with rules to approve at some point in March.
The second highest-rated player in Europe will be on tour in the US this year.
February 22, 2022 by Bogi Bjarnason, Jesse Weisz and Steve Andrews in Interview with comments
This is the the third of our Q&A interviews in our European Re-Open series that highlights European disc golfers as international travel reopens in 2022.
Outside the sizzling hotbed of disc golf talent that is Finland, where every single citizen is within three degrees of separation from a four-digit frisbee flinger, you have European countries where the sport is definitely big, yet a single MPO player absolutely dominates.
KJ Nybo and Simon Lizotte were early pioneers of this concept in Denmark and Germany, respectively. In Estonia, Albert Tamm outpaces the competition by a decent margin, and in Iceland, Blær Örn Ásgeirsson took the concept all the way to the moon on the July ratings update last year when he opened up a 67 point gap on his closest rival.
In Sweden, however, that guy is Linus Carlsson, and not only does he treat the kingdom of Sweden like a mere doormat at the gates of the international tournament scene, at 1035, he’s also the second highest rated player in Europe behind Marvin Tetzel. He’s set to play the majority of the US tour, with Las Vegas Challenge, The Memorial, WACO, Texas States, Open at Belton, Music City Open, Jonesboro Open, Dynamic Discs Open, Masters Cup, OTB Open, Portland Open, and the Beaver State Fling already on his calendar with more to come later in the year.
The interview has been lightly edited for clarity.
Ultiworld Disc Golf: If you have toured the US before, are there any lessons that you learned that will help prepare you for this year?
Linus Carlsson: I was on tour for about a month in 2019. I would say: don’t put too much pressure on myself and have fun.
How is it different than playing in Europe?
Almost everything is different. The biggest difference is the level of the players. In Europe, there are a few players at every tournament that are 1000+ rated, but in the US on the tour, almost everyone is. The courses are different too — it’s usually warmer and for me the feeling is also different.
Which event are you most excited about?
I would say DeLaveaga [Masters Cup] because of the nostalgia, and I feel like that’s my type of course.
Who are you touring with?
I’ll be touring with Discmania sponsored player Max Regitnig. He’s a chill guy who I think I’ll get along with well, and he can be my translator if needed. My friend Alexander Eketrapp is also tagging along until DDO.
How will you get around and what will your accommodation be like?
Our plan is to buy a RV and tour with that.
How are you funding this tour?
My sponsor Latitude 64° will support me a lot.
What would you need to accomplish on this tour for you to consider it a success?
I would say play consistent and stay in the top. But my main goal is to win at least one big tournament and qualify to USDGC and the DGPT Championship.
What has been the most difficult aspect of preparing for this tour?
Starting my own company and all the planning that goes into touring. I’ve got my Mom to thank for all the help because I suck at it.
Of the three tours this year (DGPT, European Pro Tour, PDGA Euro Tour), which are you most focused on?
The DGPT.
Outside of disc golf, are there places or sights in the US you plan on visiting?
Might be some cool places but nothing I’ve got in mind. What I will do, though, is get a gym membership to be able to stay in shape and be healthy.
Congratulations on your new manufacturer sponsorship deal. It does seem fitting that Sweden’s premier player be sponsored by Sweden’s leading brand, especially when the contract seems to support a full touring schedule. Can you tell us about the timeline leading up to this switch and how your new sponsorship agreement allows you to tour full time in the coming season and beyond?
Thank you. One of Latitude’s employees, and also a great disc golfer, Johannes Högberg came up to me at the Swedish Championships and asked if I might be interested in joining. I said that’s not impossible — send me a deal and I’ll look at it. That’s how it started, and I’m very happy he asked because it feels so right and I’ve been welcomed very well by them. The fans seem to love it as well.
The last couple years, especially 2020, have been pretty quiet for you on the tournament front, yet your rating has gone up an impressive 21 points since autumn 2019 and your performance at Nationals and the European Championships were truly inspiring. What are some of the challenges you faced as a professional disc golfer during COVID in Sweden? Did they help or hurt your development as a young player at a critical juncture in your career?
Yeah, so I think I was actually planning on playing the first couple of tournaments in the US but COVID came and said no. I was a bit sad, but at the same time, I had fun spending a lot of time at home, and when the restrictions allowed me, I was hanging out with some friends and playing disc golf. It was just a long off-season for me, but I did play the Swedish Championships both individually and doubles. I finished first place in both tournaments, so I guess the long off-season paid off.
Wichita Falls Disc Golf Association selling sponsorship tee signs to raise money
WICHITA FALLS (KFDX/KJTL) — Over the past couple of years, disc golf has been sweeping the nation, and it’s that growing national attention that’s inspired the Wichita Falls Disc Golf Association to make some much-needed improvements to the courses here locally.
They’re doing this in hopes of gaining more players and recognition of the sport.
It’s out with the old and in with the new. City workers have been busy removing and replacing the old baskets at Lucy Park’s disc golf course.
Wichita Falls Disc Golf Association President Darin Young said this is a long time coming.
“The baskets at Lucy Park have been installed for like twenty years in some cases so we raised a lot of money last year, around $7,000 to replace the baskets, and so last week it actually came to fruition and we got them all installed last week,” Young said.
Young along with his team have been working around the clock making improvements to not only Lucy Park’s course, but to Lake Wichita’s too, something Young said the community can actually help with.
“So we are selling sponsorships for the tee signs, so on the actual tee sign where it shows the par, the distance, those kinds of things, you can buy a spot on that logo and you can put your name or your friends or family or business or whatever, you can put your name on the tee sign and that will help us raise that money that we need,” Young said.
Spots go for $300 for a year, $500 for five years, or you can have a permanent spot for $1,000.
Young said the attention these improvements and changes have received just shows they are on track for recruiting more players into the Wichita Falls area.
“This is the first step in terms of cementing our ability to grow the sport, our commitment into growing this sport here locally and also outside the region,” Young said.
But he said they’re not stopping at Lucy and Lake Wichita improvements.
“We’re actually putting another 18-hole course in Williams Park in the eastside and we’re really excited about that project because it is an underserved community in a lot of ways with recreational activities and just generally. So we’re excited to bring something new to that community that’s going to give them a chance to have some fun with friends and family and its a really good family activity for everybody so we’re really excited about that,” Young said.
Young said when everything is said and done, these upgrades could attract some big tournaments and players, which could bring in some big bucks to Wichita Falls.
Click here for more information on how you can sponsor a tee out at Lake Wichita disc golf course.
A hole-in-one in just his fifth-ever round hooked Gillis MacDougall onto disc golf in 2019.
Two years later it led him halfway across the country to Milford, Mich., where he took second place in the 2021 PDGA United States Amateur Disc Golf Championship held earlier this month.
In just his third year of playing disc golf, the 17-year-old MacDougall now finds himself as one of the top-rated amateur players in the region.
After being exposed to the sport for the first time at Four Rivers Charter School in eighth grade, MacDougall took a casual interest in disc golf before his personality turned it into a passion.
“Anything I do, I don’t want to suck,” MacDougall said. “I’m a pretty competitive person.”
He started watching YouTube videos to correct his form, bought his own discs and began practicing throws in his free time.
MacDougall entered his first intermediate-level tournament in September 2019 and took first place. The following spring season was delayed due to the pandemic, but MacDougall continued to enter tournaments while raising his player rating.
Entering this spring season, MacDougall received an invitation to play in a national amateur tournament in Michigan, but said there were obstacles in the way.
“I looked at (the invitation) and was like, ‘I don’t have a license, I’m not even 17 yet, so probably not but I’ll ask my dad,’” MacDougall said. “I called my dad and was like ‘Can we go to Michigan,’ … and honestly it didn’t take too much convincing.”
MacDougall entered the final day of the event sitting outside the top three, but in his final round he shot a tournament-low 57 strokes, which earned him an “incredible” second-place finish.
He said it was a grueling weekend and he started to lose focus in the final round, but he persevered and put up his highest-rated round ever.
“I wish I had played all three rounds like that,” MacDougall said. “My friend kept telling me, ‘Keep doing what you’re doing.’”
Once he arrived at the tournament, MacDougall said he found out one of the players entering the tournament had a professional-level rating so he was determined to play his best and see how the results came out in the end.
“Rating is just a number,” MacDougall said. “In the end, losing to someone who a lot of people think should be a pro was way more than I ever thought I would get out.”
MacDougall said his takeaways from the tournament were that he was good enough to play at the national stage and the Professional Disc Golf Association takes care of its amateur players as well as its pros.
“Yes, I can stack up against the country,” MacDougall said. “The whole weekend atmosphere was crazy … it’s amazing to see how well amateur players are treated.”
Looking back on his hole-in-one, MacDougall said he had no clue it would change his life to the point where he was traveling around the country to play disc golf.
“I had no idea how much of my life it’d take over,” MacDougall said. “I was completely hooked. I signed the disc and it’s in my room.”
He added that disc golf’s popularity has grown in the past few years to the point where professionals can play as a full-time job. The pandemic also definitely drew a lot of new people to the sport.
“It’s grown big enough to where you can sustain yourself,” MacDougall said. “The sport and pro scene has exploded over the past year.”
MacDougall said he wants to continue playing the sport because he has fallen in love with disc golf and it is a possible career path now.
“It never feels like work,” MacDougall said. “I never want it to get to a point where it feels like work.”
February 22, 2022 by Steve Andrews in Instruction, Opinion with comments
I love asking people about their bags and why they carry the discs they do. I was talking to a friend in our club and noticed that they had two Destroyers, a Raider, and a Boss. He also had three midranges that seemed very similar to me: an EMac Truth, a Roc3, and a Compass. When I asked him why he had those particular discs, each one came with a story – a great shot they had thrown with it or the tournament where they had won it. This was a bag built by adding discs, each carrying the memory of a great moment on the course.
Many people’s bags are like this, built like a collection of their favorite songs. They like each of these discs a lot and so their bag has become a kind of greatest hits of their plastic. But a collection of favorite songs does not always work together as a whole. Instead, you should think of your bag as an old-fashioned mixtape — all the tracks need to flow and sometimes this means leaving out a favorite that just doesn’t work or including a song that holds everything together.
The important thing is to see your discs as a set. Each one plays a role, and they cooperate to help you navigate the course. You want manageable and consistent gaps between your discs to help you always have the right tool for the shot you need.
Build Out from a Solid Core
Your discs must cover all the shots you will need from your shortest approach to your longest drive. How you get there will depend on the discs you decide are the “center” of your bag. This will be different for every player, depending on their power level and the kinds of shots they like to throw. If you love hyzerflips, you may need a completely different lineup than if you rely on flex shots. It is not just whether discs are “great discs” – it is whether they fit the shots you throw the best.
Your bag should start with a disc that you love. This tentpole disc will then determine the discs you choose to fill out the rest of your lineup. Once you have that disc, you can build outwards in two ways – by finding similar discs in other speeds and by filling gaps around your tentpole disc. For the first method, look for discs that allow you throw the same shot at different distances. For example, if you are a powerful forehand player who leans on the Raptor, you can build off that disc. If you throw the Raptor around 300 feet, then you need other discs that give you a similar flight but with different distance potential. You are essentially looking for a driver, midrange, and putter version of the Raptor. For example, this player’s bag might have a “spine” of the Force, Raptor, Malta, and Zone. With this lineup, they can throw the shots they like best and use one style of throw to cover a wide range of distances. On open courses, they might only throw this shot with these discs all day.
Another way to build out your bag is by adding discs that compliment the tentpole discs. As a player with only moderate power, fairways are often the most important discs I carry, and I like to build my bag out from my main fairway driver. I have had several discs in this slot as my bag has evolved and right now my bag centers on the Teebird3. It is exactly what a tentpole disc should be: it is straight enough to be a go-to disc for a wide variety of situations and flies over 300 feet while being stable enough to resist some wind. As one of the Innova “3” models, it is also flat enough to be a good fit for my sometimes shaky forehand.
I need to fill out my bag with discs that fill the gaps around my Teebird3. In my fairway lineup, that is a straighter fairway that works great in the woods, a less stable fairway for hyzerflips that ride right, and an overstable fairway that can hold up better in the wind and be more reliable on a forehand. For me, I put in a Leopard3, which is much straighter than a Teebird3, a Roadrunner for hyzerflips, and a Firebird, which is much more overstable. I will throw the Teebird3 whenever I can, but those other discs are there to give me very manageable gaps between the discs in my fairway lineup.
This is the place where some players cycle discs instead of adding extra molds. A different player might simply beat in a Teebird3 until it was flippy enough to fit that slot instead of adding in a Leopard 3. That is also a great approach. The goal is to have useful gaps between your discs so you can cover every shot you need, and every disc has their own lane. Getting there by cycling discs or adding discs can both work. You can also mix these approaches; I like to cycle my drivers while carrying multiple molds for my short game discs.
This is also where you need to pay attention to variations within a mold. I can find Leopard3s, especially in the halo plastic, that are almost as overstable as my more beat-in Teebird3s. But though I love the feel of those halo Leopard3s, I don’t carry them. Instead, I bag a mellow middle stability Leopard3 because I want to maintain the gap between my Leopard3s and the other discs in my fairway lineup. Every disc in my bag has a specific role; the Leopard3 is there to fly dead straight and land flat.
Sometimes, you find a new disc you love and want to include it in your bag. Resist the temptation to just toss it in without thinking about how it will relate to the other discs you already carry. When you add one, think about whether it overlaps with other discs in your bag. I fell in love with the Mako3 and, when I added it to my bag, I discovered I needed to move other discs out because their flights were too similar.
I love the Berg. It is a great disc, it fun to throw, and has a completely unique flight. But the strength of my play is my short game, and it has been fine-tuned by hours and hours of joyfully monotonous field work with a Harp. Adding the Berg would require moving things around and could affect one of the best parts of my game. Maybe I should do it, but until I can pull the trigger to really shake things up my stack of Bergs stays in the basement.
Discovering a Gap
Sometimes you find a gap when you confront a shot that just doesn’t seem to be in your bag. You might discover that your midranges are too overstable to hold the turnover you need or find out that your bag has trended too much to the understable side and you can’t trust your drivers or fairways in the wind. This happens frequently if you always do your fieldwork in calm conditions. After throwing in the field, I often find myself adding discs that go further with a little more turn and then find out that disc with a perfect little turn becomes a roller when the wind blows in a tournament round.
One way to find these kinds of gaps is by playing rounds with a limited bag. A few weeks ago, I went out and played a “mids only” round. When I started, I was happy with my midrange lineup – a very overstable RocX3, a mellow Mako3, and an understable Tursas – but my gaps collapsed when the wind started blowing. It wasn’t howling, but it was enough that the Mako3 was flipping over and the Tursas became a roller. These discs, which seemed very different from each other during my field work, became very similar with just a small change in the conditions. Another problem was that the RocX3 was so overstable it flew too short off the tee.
Before this round, I thought the Mako3 was my long stable midrange. It is…as long as there isn’t any wind. Once the wind picked up, I couldn’t trust the Mako3 or get the distance I needed out of the RocX3. I needed to make a change, so I moved to a more overstable Mako3 and replaced the RocX3 with a Westside Bard that gave me the same overstability with more distance. Now I have better gaps between my discs and can face changing conditions with more confidence.
Some gaps you will find in your bag are situational. You may discover that the straight mid that you love for most of your rounds isn’t that straight when you must throw down a wooded tunnel. The fifteen to twenty feet of fade at the end of the flight that you hardly notice on a wide-open approach may send you down a 30-foot ravine in the woods. I have Raiders that are reliably overstable on a calm day but flip in a 20-mph headwind.
When this happens, there are a couple of questions to ask – is this a common situation, or a shot you aren’t likely to need very often? If this is just a unique situation or an oddly shaped hole, then you probably don’t need to change anything. However, if the situation is common enough to necessitate a change, sometimes the solution is easy, such as just adding a more overstable driver. But if you have common shots that are hard to pull off – if you can’t throw turnovers very well, for example, and you play courses where they are necessary – your bag may have become too full of overstable discs and you need to think about making some changes.
It may also be that you don’t need a new disc, you need a new shot. You may just need more field work working on turnovers or forehands with the discs you have. Often it is a blending of the two, you may need a disc that can more easily hit a particular line and more time in the field dialing in that shot.
Everyone’s Gaps are Different
A forehand dominant power player should have a different bag than me, a righthanded backhand player who builds their bag around moderate stability discs and accuracy. Where his bag might be built around the Force, Raptor, and Malta, my bag may center on the Sheriff, Teebird3, and Mako3. These bags are completely different, but they are both built around the kinds of shots we throw the best and supplemented with discs that help close the gaps.
Your playing style will reveal the gaps that need to be filled. One of my weaknesses is my forehand – I simply can’t throw them for distance. On the other hand, I love throwing hyzerflips that ride out to the right. I have much more confidence on throwing with my standard slight hyzer angle whenever I can and letting the discs do the work. My bag reflects this – right now I carry a Roadrunner and a Tursas, two discs that are very understable and perfect for this shot. The problem is that there is about 100 feet between their average distances. That gap is unmanageably large. I need a disc that will sit between them and be reliable on a hyzerflip with a right finish and go about 300 feet. I am still looking.
If I developed a great forehand, I might not need to carry these discs at all and my bag would look completely different. That’s fine. Build your bag around the discs and shots you like to throw. If you don’t throw many forehands and you don’t have a lot of power, you may not need many overstable discs in your bag. If your main shot is a huge forehand flex, then you may not need many understable options. You want to fill in the gaps around your favorite discs but build a bag that fits your game.
Yes, we should all strive to throw every shot we need with every disc we have. If you have gotten to the place where you can carry a bag like Philo’s – only five molds broken in perfectly that you can throw on every angle – then that is great. And, to be honest, I envy you. Until then, build a bag that fits your game and gives you manageable gaps – each disc working together to allow you to get the most out of your game.
The fourth-annual Kimberley Flannel Fest took place on Saturday, Feb. 18 and was an eclectic mix of competitions and events, held both in person and virtually this year and the result of a lot of hard work from Karen Rempel and James “Archie” Archibald.
“Wow, what an event this year,” said Rempel, event coordinator with Rocky Mountain Event Planners. “COVID has been tough on all of us and the Flannel Panel has been working hard to keep this event going and offer a bit of fun to Kimberley. The weather didn’t hamper Kimberley’s Flannel Festers, it was rain, sleet, snow and wind to keep trudging through.”
For the most part, all events were able to go ahead as scheduled. Downtown was bustling with the Platzl Sidewalk sale, but the Vendor Market was cancelled due to weather.
“Every year it is something new to keep us all entertained, this year was no different with many contests running throughout the week before,” Rempel said.
The event featured numerous competitions encouraging the people of Kimberley to submit photos for their entries in a variety of categories. The winners of just a few of these contests are listed below.
Emery Hoko won the Super Funky Art contest with a pair of decorated Vans slip-ons. Jake McIvor won the Shirley Rossi Back Yard Snow Sculpture with his epic recreation of Happy Hans in his backyard in Marysville.
Creekside Physiotherapy, with a skeleton dressed in garb familiar to attendees of Flannel Fests past, won the Business Flannel Battle.
Dave George won Kimberley’s Best Beard, and in recognition of all the support he received, he donated $200 to the Kimberley Food Bank.
There was also the second-annual Flannel Fest Fat Bike Poker Run, cross country Skiing at the Kimberley Nordic Club and the Little’s Flannelized Foto contest.
One new event this year was the Flannel Fest Fling, a disc golf tournament held at a temporary 18-hole course set up at the Purcell Golf Course.
The event was organized by Paul Rodgers, yes, the same one writing this article, with the help and guidance of Cranbrook Disc Golf Club President Steve Reedyk, plus a whole host of volunteers and dedicated disc golfers, who made the course a reality on extremely short notice.
Despite only being announced a week before the event, and only having a few days to layout and install the course, it was a huge hit, with well over 60 competitors coming out and braving the deep snow and having a great time.
Ben Loggains took down the win in the advanced division with a scorching score of 40, or 15 strokes under par. He bested Casey Hanemayer by two stokes, even though Hanemayer came out blazing and hit the only hole in one of the event on hole 9.
James Eliason of the Cranbrook Chain Rattlers was the winner of the B-pool with a great score of -1.
In addition to the crucial assistance of Reedyk, the generosity of Purcell Golf and the numerous volunteers, including Evan Janzen who brought out his quad to help transport baskets around the course, the event was also bolstered by numerous sponsors.
Parked Pro was the title sponsor of the event, donating prizes and setting up their shop so people could browse discs and other merchandise before and after the event. Prizes were also generously provided by the Fire Hall, Grist and Mash, Over Time Beer Works, Grubstake Pizza, Chris Keitch Metalworks and Limber Disc Golf from Calgary.
Flannel Fest as a whole also had a whole host of sponsors to help make the event and its many competitions all the more special.
“Our team would like to thank all the sponsors, the turnout was very heart warming this year with many businesses generously donating,” Rempel said. “Flannel Fest is for Everyone and it is our idea to create as many events throughout the City of Kimberley as possible.”
She added that the generosity of all the businesses was heartwarming, and all proceeds went directly into event, given as prizes and charitable donations.
“Flannel Fest was able to raise funds to maintain our trails, create sporting events and raise funds for charitable causes,” Rempel said.
There are already big plans in store for next year and the Flannel Panel is meeting soon to discuss and plan for the 2023 event, so watch out for an announcement.
Tyler Tannatt was in college after graduating from Johnston High School in 2005 when he was hit with crippling anxiety and depression.
“I played sports my whole life — baseball, basketball, soccer, football; you name it. All the way through high school. Then I went off to college and just got really homesick,” he said.
He began to suffer panic attacks so powerful that he could barely leave his room.
Relief came when a few friends introduced him to a new game.
“Some friends were playing disc golf and they said, ‘Come out. We’ll give you a couple of discs and just fling them around.’ I was so terrible. I was so terrible when I started playing, like most people.”
But being outdoors with friends lifted the burdens from his mind.
“I just started playing pretty much every day to keep me occupied — to keep my mind occupied,” Tannatt said. “I’ve been playing ever since.”
That devotion and passion, led Tannatt into his career as owner of Wander Disc Golf event planning and sport supplier, and the volunteer tournament director for this week’s Disc Golf Pro Tour stop at Pickard Park in Indianola, Friday through Sunday.
The Des Moines Metro Disc Golf Club is also supporting the event by incorporating their Des Moines Challenge disc golf tournament into the event.
Along with Pickard Park, the Des Moines Challenge will involve the Walnut Ridge disc golf course in Johnston, the Big Creek disc golf course in Polk City and the Ewing Park disc golf course in Des Moines.
World’s top disc golf athletes coming to central Iowa
More than 150 of the world’s top disc golf competitors will be in Indianola for the DGPT this week, including James Conrad, crowned the world’s greatest disc golf athlete two weeks ago at the PDGA Professional Disc Golf World Championships in Utah.
Conrad threw what many have called the greatest shot ever in disc golf, which came after making a hole-in-one earlier in the tournament. The clutch shot on hole 18 forced a playoff against five-time world champion Paul McBeth. Conrad, of course, walked away with the trophy.
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Because both Conrad and McBeth will compete in Indianola, fans are hoping for another match-up.
Also competing in the tour stop is Pickard Park’s disc golf course designer and five-time world champion Juliana Korver.
Another roughly 400 of Iowa’s top disc golf athletes are expected to be in attendance, too.
Because both the DGPT and the Des Moines Challenge competitor lists are full, registration is closed. Current PDGO membership is required to register for the Des Moines Challenge.
Seth Fendley, the director of disc golf administration and operations for the DGPT, said that despite forecasts for rain this weekend, as long as there isn’t any lightning, play will go on.
“We go on lightning delay when lightning is within a certain distance of the course — typically, it is within 15 miles,” he said via email. “Play continues when it is just raining — rain does not really influence the flight of the disc; it has more of an impact on how well the players can grip their discs.”
Wind also won’t cause the tour to be delayed, Fendley said. But wind will definitely change how a player approaches their game, he said.
The professional tour is the premier event for the unveiling of the newly updated Pickard Park gold- and silver-level layouts of the park’s disc golf course. Increased difficulty, length and precision highlight the 9,700-foot par-64 gold layout and the 8,600-foot par-65 silver layout.
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The pros will compete at Indianola’s Pickard Park, which is located at 2205 E 2nd Ave., while other divisions will play at Walnut Ridge, Big Creek and Ewing Park.
Why Indianola?
Fendley said the tour picked the Des Moines area and Pickard Park, in particular, for several reasons.
The first was timing. Because some European travel is still closed due to the pandemic, planners for the original event scheduled for Norway had to scramble for a second location, Fendley said. DGPT had already been talking with the Des Moines Challenge organizers to partner on an event in 2022, so a call was made in March to see if they could line up schedules for this year.
Another reason for choosing Pickard Park is the park’s history, its challenging layout, and the fact that the course is in excellent condition, Fendley said.
Doug Bylund, the city’s director of parks and recreation, said the course was built in 1999.
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The park also hosted the 2004 Pro World Championships, so the DGPT already knew the course was capable of hosting competitive professional play.
The park is a former farm. The land was donated to the city in the 1970s, Bylund said. Because the park is so large, the disc golf course was designed for a variety of skill levels. Each of the 18 holes has three tee boxes that allow for long, medium and short lengths for each hole. For professionals, the course will be challenging due to that length and the variety in the course including up hills, downhills and obstacles, like a big pond.
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Since the decision was made to move the DGPT to Pickard Park, Bylund said dozens of volunteers have put in thousands of hours of time sprucing up the course.
Fendley, with the DGPT, said one of the most important reasons to bring the event to Indianola is the course’s outstanding condition.
“With the innovations that have come into the game, they have continued to adjust the course to make it competitive for the top-level professionals,” he said.
What is the Disc Golf Pro Tour?
This year’s tour features 11 events across the country, starting in February in Las Vegas. The championship will be held in October in Charlotte, North Carolina.
The tour in its current format dates back to 2016, while the professional association, the Professional Disc Golf Association, has roots as far back as the 1960s. In its current form, the tour is designed to allow athletes an efficient tour format — rather than zig-zag across the country, Fendley said, competitors finish each leg of the tour on Sundays, drive to the next location and begin practice on the course by the following Tuesday. Before coming to Indianola, the tour was in Illinois. After the Iowa leg, the tour heads to Michigan and Minnesota before circling back to Illinois.
The tour also works closely with players and event locations to standardize play. For example, some courses will mark out of bounds with paint, a rope or stakes. The tour dictates white paint and white yard whiskers, Fendley said.
Another change to the sport starting in 2016 that has continued to grow and develop every year are the cash payouts to top players. In 2016, the tour doubled the funds added to the overall purse. Since then, the amount has doubled again, to $20,000.
“Before we redeveloped the tour in 2016, players were just barely scraping by,” Fendley said. “We are bringing in more money so professionals can make a living.”
An additional change to the sport, Fendley said, is bringing in more media sponsorships. The tour just closed a deal with ESPN2 to cover some of its events.
The future of the sport
Fendley says he thinks the future for disc golf is unlimited. The pandemic brought thousands of people outdoors, increasing exposure to disc golf courses, and with ever-growing media coverage and corporate sponsorships, he says the future looks solid.
One change coming for the tour is a bidding process so locations can lock in a one- to three-year event contract. Fendley said the change is going to create hot spots all over the country for the sport.
And with the development of a fan base will come better grass-roots feeder channels for developing talent, he said.
“In the next five to 10 years, we think it will be more difficult to get into our tour, but also, we see more lower-tier professional opportunities developing,” he said.
The tour’s local volunteer director, Tyler Tannatt, who now lives in Ankeny with his wife and soon-to-be 1-year-old son, agrees that the sport’s trajectory will only continue to swing upward.
His company, Wander Disc Golf, manages disc golf events and retails disc golf sportswear, including jerseys, hats and socks.
But perhaps more importantly, he is structuring his company around the gifts disc golf has given him — a portion of the company’s profits benefit mental health organizations. Along with disc golf therapy, as he calls it, Tannatt discovered a hormonal imbalance that is treated successfully today.
“I feel great again — that’s my reason for my brand, to share my story, to share my experiences so that if there are other people out there struggling, they can at least see that I’ve gone through it, you can get through it; it’s not the end of the world; you can get to be who you want to be.”
Tannatt is echoing the father of disc golf, “Steady” Ed Headrick, who said in an interview at the 1993 PDGA Professional World Championships that disc golf has been a gift to “the tremendous multitude of wandering souls.”
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Want to go?
Live-streaming: The competition’s three days will be streamed on the tour’s platform, theDisc Golf Network. Daily recaps and streaming of the third day will also be available for free on the Disc Golf Pro Tour’sYouTube channel.
Spectators are welcome to attend the professional events at Pickard Park as well as the events at the Ewing, Big Creek and Walnut Ridge courses. Tickets are required for the professional rounds at Pickard Park. Spectators can attend the rounds at Ewing, Big Creek and Walnut Ridge for free.
As of Friday, more than 700 of the available 1,000 tickets had been sold.
Tickets are available on the tour’s website, DGPT.com. More information about this weekend’s events can be found at DesMoinesChallenge.com.
Ticket packages are:
A 3-day VIP spectator pass for $107 that offers access to on-course guided pod spectating including all general admission areas as well as a commemorative event disc by Discraft and sticker.
A 3-day general admission spectator pass for $35.80 that offers access to all three spectator zones viewing of holes 1-5, 6-8 and 18.
A Friday VIP spectator pass for $30.13 that offers access to on-course guided pod spectating as well as all general admission areas.
A Saturday VIP spectator pass for $35.80 that offers access to on-course guided pod spectating as well as all general admission areas.
A Sunday VIP spectator pass for $47.14 that offers access to on-course guided pod spectating as well as all general admission areas.
Details on the DSM Challenge’s schedule can be found at DesMoinesChallenge.com.
Schedule details:
Men tee off in the morning; women tee off in the afternoon.
Male and female elite professional division tee times, at Pickard Park:
Round 1, Friday: 7:30 a.m. – 4 p.m.
Round 2, Saturday: 7:30 a.m.- 4 p.m.
Round 3, Sunday: 7:30 a.m.- 4 p.m.
An awards ceremony will immediately follow Sunday’s final round at tournament central at Pickard Park.
Male and female Pool B, Pool C, Pool D schedule:
Round 1, Friday: Shotgun start at 9 a.m.
Pool B: Big Creek, Polk City
Pool C: Walnut Ridge, Johnston
Pool D: Ewing, Des Moines
Round 2, Saturday: Shotgun start at 9 a.m.
Pool B: Ewing
Pool C: Big Creek
Pool D: Walnut Ridge
Round 3, Sunday: Shotgun start at 8:30 a.m.
Pool B: Walnut Ridge
Pool C: Ewing
Pool D: Big Creek
An awards ceremony will immediately follow at tournament central at Pickard Park, in Indianola.
Teresa Kay Albertson is a reporter for the Des Moines Register and Indianola Record Herald. Reach her at [email protected] or 515-419-6098.
This summer the Jellystone Park Camp-Resort is taking over Beaver Brook Campground in North Monmouth. According to MaineBiz, it will be called the Augusta Jellystone Park. There are 75 Jellystone Park Camp-Resorts in the country and this is actually Maine’s second. Yogi Bear has been stealing picnic baskets up in Skowhegan at Yonder Hill.
Beaver Brook was the perfect place for a Jellystone takeover. They already have a waterpark with tube slides, a heated pool, miniature golf, and disc golf. The new owners plan on making some renovations and improvements including property-wide Wi-Fi.
These franchised Yogi Bear Jellystone camps sound fun. Especially if you are a kid. I’m not sure if kids these days even know who Yogi Bear is, but he was created by Hanna-Barbera (Flinstones, The Jetsons, Scooby-Doo). He was a character in a cartoon called Huckleberry Hound. He was a breakout star from that cartoon. Not sure if there is bad blood between them, but no one cares about Huckleberry Hound and everyone loves Yogi Bear. Who came first? Yogi Bear, not Yogi Bera and yes, he was named after the famed Yankee.
There’s tons to do with Yogi and your family. Like fishing. Why Yogi is using a pole and not his God-given talent as a bear is beyond me, but fishing is something you can do at Jellystone in Augusta. Are you up for some camping with a big bear? They are taking reservations now!
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Stacker, set out to compile a definitive list of every Disneyland attraction you can enjoy today and ranked them by their age. Using real-time data from Touring Plans, Disney archives, and historical news releases and reviews, our list starts with exciting recent park additions and stretches back to the oldest opening-day classics. This list focuses on the original Disneyland Park, so you will not see any rides from its neighboring California Adventure located just across the promenade. Read on to discover the oldest Disneyland rides you can still ride today.
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Using March 2019 data from the Social Security Administration, Stacker compiled a list of the most popular names in each of the 50 states and Washington D.C., according to their 2018 SSA rankings. The top five boy names and top five girl names are listed for each state, as well as the number of babies born in 2018 with that name. Historically common names like Michael only made the top five in three states, while the less common name Harper ranks in the top five for 22 states.
Curious what names are trending in your home state? Keep reading to see if your name made the top five — or to find inspiration for naming your baby.
A municipal golf course in Staffordshire could be closed down because not enough people use it – despite the participation surge in the last two years.
Beacon Park is a public park in the centre of Lichfield, which includes an 18-hole, par three golf course that opened in 1973, as well as a footgolf course and a disc golf course, which both opened in 2017.
Lichfield District Council has said current usage of the facilities could see them removed and the land used for alternative activities.
The council claims that the three golf facilities combined see just 8,000 uses each year – an average of around 20 a day.
It said changes could see more people able to use the area of Beacon Park where the course currently sits.
Councillor Iain Eadie, cabinet member for leisure, said: “Beacon Park is an amazing green space and a great resource to help keep our residents healthy and active.
“What is happening currently is that over a third of the park is only being used by a handful of people.
The council is running a survey on the golf courses until February 21
“Should we look at things like community gardens, orchards, rewilding or things like tree top rope courses and zip lines?
“We really want to hear what people would like to do [via a survey], so that the whole of Beacon Park can be used more.”
However, some local people took to social media to voice their opposition to any move to make changes, with some stating that the golf courses have been poorly managed and suffered from a lack of investment, some stating that more than 20 people a day use them – they just don’t pay, and others expressing concern that the green area will end up being built on.
‘You only see 20 people per day because most of the time the booth isn’t open to pay for golf, and some people just don’t pay. And it’s not just about golf, it’s also nice as a park. Perhaps run the golf course better? Advertising, being open when you say you will be, running competition days,’ wrote one.
‘Last time I walked around the golf course much of it was knee deep in water due to flooding,’ wrote another.
‘There are far more than 20 people a day using a third of Beacon Park! That is just the number who pay for playing golf. What about the many more who enjoy the peaceful walks and value the variety of trees alongside the allotments and peace garden? There is also the quality of life of those with homes alongside it to consider. This amenity should not be lost to concrete, paving or tarmac but hopefully kept as a natural but maintained area for everyone,’ wrote a third person.