REDWOOD CITY, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Mar 22, 2022–
Today, Electronic Arts Inc. (NASDAQ: EA) announced that EA SPORTS™ PGA TOUR™ will be launching in Spring 2023. EA SPORTS™ PGA TOUR™ will be the only place golf fans can play all four major championships including the Masters Tournament, PGA Championship, U.S. Open Championship, and The Open Championship. Players will also be able to build their own legendary career as they authentically compete at THE PLAYERS Championship, the FedExCup Playoffs, and The Amundi Evian Championship while experiencing the unique atmosphere and venues of each tournament. Experience golf in high-fidelity via EA’s Frostbite™ engine with ultra-realistic visuals that will make fans feel like they are right in the middle of the action on some of the most iconic courses in the world.
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Experience the Thrill of Championship Golf with EA SPORTS PGA TOUR in Spring 2023 (Photo: Business Wire)
“There are few things in sports that match the thrill of winning a major championship, and we’re excited to bring all four majors – the Masters Tournament, PGA Championship, U.S. Open Championship, and The Open Championship – and a true next gen championship golf experience to fans next year,” said Cam Weber, EVP and GM, EA SPORTS. “Through our PGA TOUR and LPGA partnerships, all-new PGA TOUR athlete tracking integration, and events like THE PLAYERS Championship and FedExCup Playoffs, players will be able to get an all-access pass to pro championship golf like never before.”
Below are a few of the key features that players can look forward to in EA SPORTS™ PGA TOUR™ when it launches next year. More up-to-date details on golfers, courses, and other aspects of the game will be revealed closer to launch.
THE PLAYERS Championship and FedExCup Playoffs – Players will also be able to compete in the PGA TOUR’s most thrilling events during the golf season including THE PLAYERS Championship and FedExCup Playoffs. True to the real-life PGA TOUR season, players earn FedExCup points throughout the in-game Career Mode for a chance to make the FedExCup Playoffs, with the top golfers at the end of the year given the opportunity to win the FedExCup. Career mode will also see the return of the Korn Ferry Tour, adding another layer of depth to the game that will allow players to hone their skills before joining the PGA TOUR.
The exclusive home of all four of golf’s major championships – Golf enthusiasts can build a legendary career as they authentically compete at golf’s most prestigious annual events, while experiencing the unique atmosphere and venues of each tournament.
LPGA and The Amundi Evian Championship – Golf fans can also compete at The Amundi Evian Championship, one of the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) Tour’s five major championships and will have the opportunity to play as several female athletes as well as create a female golfer of their own in the newly overhauled Create-A-Player feature. Players will be able to participate in a series of LPGA-themed challenges and other events. Iona Stephen will also be joining the EA commentary team as the first female on-course commentator in game, bringing her experienced insights from both playing professionally and working in golf broadcasting.
ShotLink® and TrackMan Data – PGA TOUR golfers will be authentically replicated in EA SPORTS PGA TOUR like never before with ShotLink® powered by CDW, the PGA TOUR’s proprietary real-time scoring system. EA SPORTS PGA TOUR uniquely incorporates ShotLink data, which will provide extensive amounts of data that will be integrated into the game’s development, resulting in accurate player ratings and skills and magnified true-to-life in-game events. Data from TrackMan, a world leader in 3D ball flight measurement and swing analysis, is also being incorporated into the game to add an additional layer of authenticity by allowing EA’s game designers to perfect gameplay and numerous stats such as club tuning.
For more details on EA SPORTS PGA TOUR, and to register for email updates, visit www.ea.com/games/pga-tour. Follow @EASPORTSPGATOUR on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram for the latest updates.
EA SPORTS PGA TOUR is being developed in Orlando and Madrid by EA Tiburon.
The Spring 2023 release date for EA SPORTS PGA TOUR was factored into Electronic Arts’ FY23 financial expectations disclosed during FY22 Q3 earnings on February 1, 2022. For more information, visit IR.ea.com.
PRESS ASSETS ARE AVAILABLE AT EAPressPortal.com
About Electronic Arts
Electronic Arts (NASDAQ: EA) is a global leader in digital interactive entertainment. The Company develops and delivers games, content, and online services for Internet-connected consoles, mobile devices, and personal computers.
In fiscal year 2021, EA posted GAAP net revenue of $5.6 billion. Headquartered in Redwood City, California, EA is recognized for a portfolio of critically acclaimed, high-quality brands such as EA SPORTS™ FIFA, Battlefield™, Apex Legends™, The Sims™, Madden NFL, Need for Speed™, Titanfall™ and F1™. More information about EA is available at www.ea.com/news.
EA SPORTS, Frostbite, Battlefield, Apex Legends, The Sims, Need for Speed, and Titanfall are trademarks of Electronic Arts Inc. PGA TOUR, LPGA Tour, Amundi Evian Championship, the Masters, PGA Championship, U.S. Open Championship, The Open Championship, THE PLAYERS Championship, FedExCup Playoffs, FedEx St. Jude Championship, BMW Championship, TOUR Championship, TPC Southwind, Wilmington Country Club, East Lake Golf Club, Korn Ferry Tour, ShotLink, CDW, TrackMan, Madden, NFL, FIFA and F1 are property of their respective owners and used with permission.
About PGA TOUR
By showcasing golf’s greatest players, the PGA TOUR engages, inspires, and positively impacts our fans, partners, and communities worldwide.
The PGA TOUR, headquartered in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, co-sanctions tournaments on the PGA TOUR, PGA TOUR Champions, Korn Ferry Tour, PGA TOUR Latinoamérica, Mackenzie Tour-PGA TOUR Canada, Forme Tour and PGA TOUR Series-China. Members on the PGA TOUR represent the world’s best players, hailing from 29 countries and territories outside the United States (96 international members). Worldwide, PGA TOUR tournaments are broadcast to 216 countries and territories in 28 languages. Virtually all tournaments are organized as non-profit organizations to maximize charitable giving, and to date, tournaments across all Tours have generated more than $3.2 billion.
Fans can follow the PGA TOUR on PGATOUR.COM, the No. 1 site in golf, on the PGA TOUR app and on social media channels, including Facebook, Instagram (in English, Spanish and Korean ), LinkedIn, Twitter, WeChat, Weibo, Toutiao, Douyin and LINE.
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After DJ Hines met his wife Ashley, the Cartersville, Georgia native, moved to Chilton County to start his family and career. Hines has since started his own disc jockey and entertainment business and welcomed two little girls into the world.
All was well in the world for Hines, however, as a former college baseball player at the University of Georgia, the urge to compete was palpable for him.
Then the 32-year old found his new calling in 2020 – disc golf.
“When I moved to Chilton County, I didn’t have any sports to compete in,” Hines said. “I didn’t even really know what disc golf was.”
When the COVID-19 pandemic hit in March 2020, Hines was approached by Eddie Lightsey, the associate pastor of West End Baptist Church, about taking up disc golf. Lightsey helped Hines get the appropriate gear to begin learning the game.
“He’s like the disc golf grandpa around here,” Hines said. “He buys up a bunch of discs, teaches every age about the sport, and he set me up with my first discs and bag.”
Hines watched videos of professional disc golfers to learn new skills and discovered the Professional Disc Golf Association.
Hines, along with some friends, played games for fun and talked a lot about starting a league in Clanton to compete in.
“Instead of talking about it, we wanted to just do it, and I just fell in love with it,” Hines said. “It’s a great way to be outside and to do something active. They have tournaments all across the world where you can go and compete, so having a sport in my thirties where I can still compete at a high level gave me that competitive fire again.”
The Clanton league was created through the PDGA website, and it officially started in spring 2021. Roughly 50-60 people came out in the spring, and around 80 participated in the fall league.
Hines, along with the help of Brian Jones of Clanton Outdoors, was able to partner with the city of Clanton to establish a public disc golf course at City Park, now known as Peach City Disc Golf Course.
After making the league, Hines had the opportunity to begin working on his craft on the disc golf course.
“I’ve started to take an intention approach to the game,” Hines said. “Making it a craft and getting, improving and working on different things.”
The league is sanctioned league, so players can earn rating points to improve their division and possibly get invited to bigger tournaments. Players in the league can partner with any other competitor and play 18 holes of disc golf.
There are four divisions in professional disc golf: novice, recreation, intermediate and advanced. Hines competes in the intermediate division, but is on the cusp of the advanced division.
“I had a pretty decent year last year,” Hines said. “This year, I’ve started off really hot, I told myself this year I wanted to go out and win some tournaments and place well in some good ones.”
Hines did just that by winning the Frostbite Open in Opelika by 12 strokes and the Fairview Freeze in Fairview by two strokes.
His performances in those events, and in the league, earned Hines enough advanced points and a spot on the PDGA Amateur Worlds invite list.
The tournament takes place in Princeton, Indiana from June 21-25 with a sixth day for the finals. Hines is still unsure if he will attend the tournament.
“It’s a lot of disc golf to play,” Hines said. “If someone could sponsor me to help me get there, that’s would be incredible. I would love to go and compete, and represent Chilton County and our community.”
Hines is hopeful that a plan will come to fruition to go this year, but also plans to get enough points throughout his tournaments this year to be invited back again.
Hines’s main goal is not to make the pro tour, but to help grow the disc golf scene in Chilton County. With no other disc golf courses within 30 minutes of Clanton, he hopes to continue to grow the city course in Clanton to “make it a gem in Chilton County and Central Alabama.”
Hines also hopes to partner with the city again to find land to build another course in the county, and also bring the sport to the high schools and lower levels for kids. He partnered with the YMCA last summer during their summer camp to conduct a disc golf day one day a week.
“Creating a disc golf culture here locally that welcomes beginners and people to play this sport that is fun and exciting is my goal,” Hines said. “Give them something to get away from life and have a good time.”
The Clanton spring disc golf league began on March 19 with Hines finishing second. More information on the Clanton league can be found at PDGA.com or the Clanton Disc Golf Community & League Facebook page.
Orchards as we call it is was my local course for years. A local neighborhood park that was just 5 minutes from my place and at just 9 holes it was great for a quick round of disc after work.
Hillsboro has a trail system throughout the city that connects different parks and provides a great place for folks to get out for a walk, run or ride. Orchard Park is on this trail system and I think of it as a wide spot on the trail.
Parking is not too bad though the week but weekends can be tight especially if it is the first decent weather in a while. Unless it has been dry for a while, the grassy areas of the course can be viewed as a swamp and you may need waders to keep your feet dry while you play. At a minimum, a change of socks in the car and a dry rag to keep your disc dry is a must here.
The course itself starts by having you throw across the walking trail to the first hole onto a grassy field. I’ve never shot a hole in one but on this tee shot, I’ve come close a couple of times. The second and third holes just go around the perimeter of the grass, then you cross the trail and you are off to the next few holes.
Most of the holes are straightforward forward but watch your disc if it goes out of bounds. Not a lot of undergrowth but bushes that can hide a disc pretty well. In comparison to other courses I’ve played, this is a low-risk course for losing your discs.
The back half, starting at hole seven goes through some woods on one of my favorite holes to hate. It is a very tight shot that some tree is almost always going to grab your disc. But it is possible to curve your disc to the right of the fairway and slip it in, but that is rare at least for me. Hole 8 is back to the grassy fields and heads you back toward the parking lot.
There is a bit of a hike after 8 to get back to the ninth tee. The last hole is on the big grassy field that you went around on holes 1 to 3. It’s a wide-open shot and it seems that it is always muddy around the hole. It’s a short walk back to your car, but this course goes pretty fast so most folks go back for a second round.
The other fun thing about Orchards is that it is a very family-friendly course. I often see families with their smaller kids learning how to throw and play the game. A fair number of pooches are retrieving discs on the fairway. For the most part, they tend to know which disc belongs to their human, but I can say I have at least one disc that got its bite marks from this course.
Overall, I would rate this course as fairly easy, great for beginners, not too much of a risk of losing your disc, and a fun course to close in town.
Jay Fernandez is just a disc golf fan for many years now, starting over 35 years ago as a way to do something with his family. These days he is retired but still enjoys getting out and throwing the disc whenever he can. Jay started writing his own reviews of the courses he has played to give you an unprofessional review of a course.
PEORIA, Illinois — The 2021 Ledgestone Insurance Open is bigger and better.
Historic big, in fact.
“We have 2,000 participants registered this year, the most ever here for this tournament, and a record as the largest field in the history of the disc golf sport,” said Ledgestone founder and longtime director Nate Heinold. “It’s just massive on a scale hard to imagine. We’re so excited to see the sport thrive like this.”
The Disc Golf Pro Tour’s Ledgestone is bigger than ever in other ways, too. The prize money for the Men’s and Women’s Pro divisions is $130,000 — the biggest purse in the history of the sport.
And the tournament, which has always worked as a fundraiser for local charities, expects to generate a record donation this year.
“We’re looking at raising $150,000 for charities,” Heinold said. “That will be the largest we’ve ever been able to donate.”
Who’s playing in the Ledgestone Insurance Open?
The Pro Men’s and Pro Women’s field is stacked with elite world-ranked players. It includes Ledgestone veteran Paul McBeth, who has $555,000 in career winnings and just finished runnerup in the World Championships at Utah in late June.
James Conrad, who emerged from that tournament as World Champion, is in the Ledgestone field, too.
So is elite world-ranked player Ricky Wysocki ($462,000 in career winnings). And on the women’s side, Catrina Allen and Paige Pierce line up just days after Allen beat Pierce on the final hole for the World Championship.
Wysocki and Allen won the 2020 Ledgestone.
A look back from the basket down a fairway cut into the woods on the Northwood Park Black course in Morton, where pros in the 2021 Ledgestone Insurance Open will be tested.
Where is the Ledgestone Insurance Open played?
The 2021 edition of the event takes part on 12 courses around the Peoria area, but the pros will play on Lake Eureka and Northwood Park in Morton. The Ledgestone has grown to 74 staff members, countless volunteers and 12 courses.
Play will happen at Bradley Park (Peoria), Camp Kearney (Canton), Kennel Lake (Morton), Lake Eureka (Eureka), McNaughton Park (Pekin), Megiddo at Westwood Park (Morton), Northwood Park (Morton), Sunset Hills Disc Golf Course (Pekin), Washington Park (Washington), Wildlife Prairie Park (Hanna City), Illinois Central College (East Peoria).
Look back at 2020: How the Peoria area’s biggest disc golf tournament got bigger, better amid COVID-19
New this year is the Northwood Park Black course in Morton. It’s a 10,500-foot course cut into the woods at Morton and designed with U.S. Open style angles and hazards.
“It is, officially, the hardest disc golf course in the world,” Heinold said. “It will challenge the world’s best players.”
Can fans attend the Ledgestone Insurance Open?
The 2020 Ledgestone operated under pandemic conditions, with roped off areas to achieve distancing, masks required and reduced spectators capacity.
But 2021 has no capacity limits or mask requirements for spectators.
“It’s back to a more normal feeling,” Heinold said.
There are various attendance options.
VIP Badge: $95 for the week includes parking, event admission, VIP tent access (food on hand), and a spectator pack that includes GRIPeq G Series bag, a limited edition disc, tournament T-shirt, tournament badge.
Weekly parking pass: $35 allows one person parks free and gets event admission, plus a Ledgestone disc and T-shirt.
Daily parking pass: $10 includes admission on days pro open men or women play at Eureka or Sunset Hills. Not available at Northwood Park
Dave Eminian is the Journal Star sports columnist, and covers Bradley men’s basketball, the Rivermen and Chiefs. He writes the Cleve In The Eve sports column for pjstar.com. Reach him at 686-3206 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @icetimecleve.
MONTEREY — The city of Monterey and Monterey Stinging Jellies Disc Golf Club are finalizing an agreement to reestablish the Ryan Ranch disc golf course including a contribution of $35,100 for Americans With Disabilities Act improvements.
“The City Council did authorize the city manager to enter into an agreement with the Monterey Stinging Jellies Disc Golf Club,” said Parks and Recreation Director Karen Larson.
The council also approved appropriating the more than $35,000 to the capital project fund for the Ryan Ranch disc golf Americans With Disabilities Act improvements.
“We are still working with the Monterey Stinging Jellies Disc Golf Club to finalize an agreement,” said Larson.
City staff, working with the disc golf club, developed and formalized an agreement for disc golf activities at Ryan Ranch Park and the funding of Americans With Disabilities Act improvements for the setting, which would allow for passive uses including disc golf, walking, hiking and bird watching. Site improvements would include the re-installation of disc golf baskets, a new accessible parking stall and sidewalk to the first golf tee, and an Americans With Disabilities Act-compliant portable toilet with a hand-washing station. Periodic site maintenance would be performed by the disc golf club including mowing the area, maintenance of the portable toilet, tree work and weed trimming as necessary without compensation.
In December 2018, disc golf play was suspended at Ryan Ranch Park as Monterey city officials determined the environmental and Americans With Disabilities Act compliance issues before considering a user agreement. At that time, Monterey Stinging Jellies Disc Golf Club, which had been providing play at the course for 10 years, removed the baskets used in the sport.
This agreement would serve as a model public-nonprofit partnership between a community organization and the city, allowing expanded recreational uses at a park while minimizing operational and capital infrastructure costs for the city, according to city documents.
In a letter to the City Council, Stinging Jellies Disc Golf Club President Chad Gile said that disc golf is a rapidly growing sport enjoyed by millions of players on more than 5,860 courses worldwide.
The disc golf club maintained and operated the course at no additional cost to the city from 2008-2018, hosting tournaments that attracted players from across the country, including the 2011 World Championship of Disc Golf — the first world championship with a six-figure pro purse — the 2016 NoCal Team Invitational, a first-of-its-kind team match play tournament featuring 12 of the top disc golf clubs in Northern California, and the annual fundraising tournament, which consistently raised more than a thousand dollars for organizations such as the Monterey County Food Bank, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and the Big Sur Volunteer Fire Brigade.
Giles said that the global pandemic brought to light the need for outdoor recreational activities and disc golf provides an economically accessible outdoor sport that makes use of the land’s natural condition and terrain.
The city of Monterey currently owns and operates the 75-acre Ryan Ranch Park located along Monterey-Salinas Highway between Ragsdale Drive and Canyon Del Rey Boulevard. The park is in a natural setting and includes a parking area for users. The Ryan Ranch Park is zoned for park and open space uses.
As the site was informally a disc golf course in the past, the city now seeks to formalize this use.
In June 2019, the city submitted an application and supporting information to the Monterey County Airport Land Use Commission staff for consideration of a proposed development of a disc golf course within Ryan Ranch Park as the site falls within the airport safety zones and requires Airport Land Use Commission approval.
In July 2019, the commission unanimously approved the city’s request, determining and recommending that due to the close proximity of the airport, the city should apply a non-standard condition to limit the number of events or tournaments within Ryan Ranch Park to four per year and no more than 200 persons on-site at any one time per event.
In September 2019, the Monterey Parks and Recreation Commission supported the site improvements at the park site, and in November 2019, the council certified the Ryan Ranch Park mitigated negative declaration.
With the signed agreement and the appropriation of the funding from Monterey Stinging Jellies Disc Golf Club, the Americans With Disabilities Act improvements could be completed and the disc golf course reopened by the end of this fiscal year.
In his letter to the city, Gile said his organization is excited to partner with the city of Monterey and provide maintenance and operations at the Ryan Ranch Disc Golf Course while introducing the sport to the broader community and providing an additional recreational outlet.
MEYERS, Calif. — After several years of hard work by local disc golf enthusiasts, a new course has opened at Tahoe Paradise Park in Meyers.
Dave Salazar has been playing disc golf for more than three decades and has had a course in mind for Meyers for several years. He’d mapped out an 18-hole course that started at Tahoe Paradise Park and went into the Forest Service land behind the park.
The Forest Service was on board at first but after some staff changes, they backed out of the project. Salazar put the project on the back burner until another disc golf enthusiast, Zack Zimlich, approached him about picking the project back up.
Zimlich has been playing competitively in the area for the past seven years and he noticed that while South Lake had two courses already, there was one missing in the Meyers area. He was connected with Salazar about making that course a reality.
“I was like, ‘instead of making an 18-hole course that lays out on the Forest Service property, why don’t we approach the park and see what acreage we can use in the park and make a 9-holer and start from there,” Zimlich said.
They attended many Tahoe Paradise Park board meetings. Fortunately Park Manager Greg Hall was enthusiastic about the idea and helped them push the board.
Zach Zimlich, Dave Salazar and Greg Hall spent hours of planning and building to bring the course to life. (Laney Griffo/ Tahoe Daily Tribune)
After receiving approval, Salazar, Zimlich and Hall immediately went to work designing and building the course.
When designing a course, Salazar said he and Zimlich just started by walking in the woods.
“It kind of just happens naturally,” Salazar said.
They would just throw discs from different areas to different features and just decide on what made the most sense and would make the least amount of impact. Zimlich also wanted to make sure there was a good variety on the course.
“Our main goal was to build the course where there’s technicality but every shot variety that you have so that any player can step up on the pad and throw to that basket,” Zimlich said.
Zimlich winds up for his drive on hole 3. (Laney Griffo/ Tahoe Daily Tribune)
The first three holes are laid out near the playground and go around the basketball court.
“It’s perfect for the future of people getting interested in the sport,” Zimlich said. “You’re going to have kids and parents seeing people throwing off of hole one and say, ‘oh what’s this,’ and gauge some interest and see what this is really all about.”
Between holes three and four, players walk across the parking lot to Lake Baron and hole four starts to the right of the lake. The rest of the holes use the natural environment, with trees providing obstacles and granite boulders used as features around the course.
The pin for hole seven was placed in the middle of granite boulders that were already on the course. (Laney Griffo/ Tahoe Daily Tribune)
There are 26 different pin placements for the whole course and Salazar said he’s trying to move the baskets once a week.
For Hall, he really considered the safety of the other users of the park, so there are signs on the walking paths to tell users to be aware but for the most part, trees and pin layouts should protect the other parks users.
However, he’s happy with how the course ties in with the rest of the park. On days when there is live music, it can be heard throughout the whole course. The tee pad for hole seven is near the river, so players can take a break to cool off in the river. Hall is passionate about the park having something for everyone and this course gives park guests another option.
Funding for the project was no problem. The community was so excited for a new course that donations poured in. Salazar said they raised most of the money within two weeks.
The Meyers Community Foundation provided them with a donation to help reach their goal. Tahoe Wellness Center donated funding for the main map which will be placed at the start of the course. Meek’s Lumber provided wood for benches and retaining walls throughout the course and Tahoe Sand and Gravel donated the gravel for the tee pads.
“Our motto is ‘built by the community for the community,’” Salazar said.
Hours of volunteer work helped clearing debris and dead branches, build paths and stairs and tamp down gravel for the tee pads.
“We were really selective on what stuff we took out because once you take it out, you can’t put it back in,” Salazar said.
They are still asking for donations so that they can continue to maintain the course. There will be a donation box at hole one and a QR code on the main map that will direct players to a donation page.
Salazar is also going to approach the Forest Service again and show them how successful the front nine is, in hopes of them approving a back nine course on their property.
In the meantime, the Tribune highly recommends checking out the course that is clearly a labor of love for Salazar, Zimlich and Hall.
They used natural features as obstacles on the course. Laney Griffo/ Tahoe Daily Tribune
The best disc golf professionals will make their way to Central Minnesota this weekend for The Preserve Championship.
The tournament will take place at Airborn Disc Golf Preserve in Clearwater, Minnesota. This weekend is one of a handful of disc golf tournaments throughout the country as the top professionals compete for the top spot not only at The Preserve, but in the tour.
This disc golf course was designed by one of the top disc golf professionals in the world, Cale Leiviska, back in May 2020.
“Cale has built a great course,” said Seth Fendley, operations director for the Disc Golf Pro Tour. “That property has three disc golf courses on it and he takes and creates a larger scale championship course out of those three courses. He pairs it down into one and creates a championship course for the tournament.”
Since the opening, Airborn Disc Golf Preserve has been a popular place for many disc golf enthusiasts, especially in the Minnesota area. There are three courses at the Clearwater location.
READ MORE: World-class disc golfer opens high-caliber courses in Clearwater
Timberwolf and Lynx are more for the experienced disc golf player as there are plenty of obstacles and challenges throughout the course. The Red Fox was made for the inexperienced disc golfers as it’s a par three and helps new players develop a love for the sport.
This weekend, the players will play on the Black Bear course, which is a par 65 for men and par 66 for women. There’s about 10,000 feet of layout for both of the courses for the two genders.
All of these courses are located right next to the Mississippi River in Clearwater and the area used to be an old golf course, so it was a perfect opportunity for Leiviska to make into a disc golf course.
“Minnesota, in and of itself, is one of the major states for disc golf in the United States,” Fendley said. “You only have like California and Texas that have more disc golfers in it. The crazy thing about it is that in Minnesota you can disc golf year round but most people don’t want to whereas California and Texas you can disc golf all year.
“That’s just a testament to show how strong Minnesota disc golf is in the country.”
The Preserve Championship will start on Friday and finish on Sunday with the best disc golf players in the country, and even the world. The 2021 women’s world champion, Catrina Allen, will be playing this weekend and she’s actually from Pipestone, Minnesota.
The 2021 men’s world champion, James Conrad, will also be playing this weekend along with many other top players on both the men’s and women’s side.
There will be 30 men from Minnesota playing in the tournament including three from St. Cloud: Aidan Guthrie, Jonny Twofingers Estes and Louis LaPorta. There will also be seven women from Minnesota playing this weekend and none are from the St. Cloud area.
“We have the best of the best playing this weekend in Clearwater,” Fendley said. “It’ll be a good weekend with a lot of competition.”
The Preserve Championship had its inaugural tournament last year and Nikko Locastro narrowly edged out a win over Calvin Heimburg and Simon Lizotte for the men. On the women’s side, Paige Pierce brought home the victory over Catrina Allen and Missy Gannon.
The Disc Golf Pro Tour and Leiviska agreed to have a maximum of 1000 people at this weekend’s event. They believe they can host more on the course, but due to the COVID-19 pandemic, they wanted to keep the tournament controlled.
The tickets for the weekend are sold out as there were only 100 tickets still available heading into this final week, but those are bought out by the middle of the week.
If people couldn’t buy tickets to the event and still want to watch the action from the weekend, there’s a live stream option to watch the top leaders online. The live stream can be found at Disc Golf Network and it’s a paid subscription.
Fendley said the Disc Golf Pro Tour plans to return to Airborn Disc Golf Preserve for future years to continue a yearly tournament.
“The Preserve is a beautiful course with plenty of challenges for these players,” Fendley said. “I know a lot of them are looking forward to playing this weekend.”
Brian Mozey is the high school sports reporter for the St. Cloud Times. Reach him at 320-255-8772 or [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @BrianMozey.
When Tom Butler was a student at Arizona State University, he witnessed the beginning of disc golf in the Valley.
Courses were constructed at Tempe Beach Park and Vista Del Camino in Scottsdale in the 1980s as the game began getting traction alongside the popularity of ultimate frisbee. In disc golf, players throw a frisbee at a basket.
Over time, the game has steadily gained traction in the U.S., which is home to more than 7,000 courses – including roughly 75 in Arizona.
It is one of the fastest growing games in the country, according to AARP, which estimates 50 million rounds of disc golf have been played globally in 2021.
Now, Butler is campaigning to have Ahwatukee to have its own disc golf course at Sun Ray Park.
An Ahwatukee resident since 1987, Butler said he’s excited about that prospect for many reasons.
“One is my love for this game – it’s just so much fun,” he said. “Secondly, I am so excited to potentially be able to ride my bike two miles to a disc golf course and play whenever I want.”
Butler’s campaign for a course at Sun Ray Park started after he learned that Udisc – advertised as “The App for Disc Golfers” – showed that the closest course to Butler was 17 miles away at Vista Del Camino Park.
He decided to connect with the office Ahwatukee city Councilman Sal DiCiccio, whose office laid out the plan that residents must follow in order to try and get a pars amenity added in their community.
DiCiccio’s Chief of Staff Sam Stone said his office wants to support any person that comes in with an idea to add a disc golf course or similar outdoor activity venue. However, community support for the project is an important factor in deciding whether it will happen.
The same holds true for a campaign by Ahwatukee residents Carrie McNeish and Jill Ostendrop for pickleball courts at Desert Foothills Park. They too were told by Stone to gather evidence showing a demand in their neighborhood for a park.
The 3-year-old 16-court pickleball complex at Pecos Park is great, the two Ahwatukee women say, but unfortunately, a lot of other pickleball players think so too.
“The Pecos courts are always overwhelmed,” said Ostendorp, who has set up an email address – [email protected] – for residents to express their support at Desert Foothills Park, which the city never finished and which has room to accommodate pickleball courts.
Ostendorp brought their plea to the Phoenix Parks and Recreation Board earlier this month, but didn’t get much reaction from it beyond a thank you.
She told the board they’ve already received 400 emails supporting the courts and that most of them were Ahwatukee residents living within two miles of Desert Foothills Park.
She asked the board what the next steps were. No one on the board answered.
Butler said a disc golf course at Sun Ray Park makes sense because there’s “room there to add something like this and not take away from existing uses of the park.”
Added Stone: “Our residents always appreciate new recreational opportunities, especially new outdoor recreational opportunities with everything that’s going on with COVID. This is another great thing that people can do outdoors in very safe circumstances.”
In June, Butler was notified by Albert Santana, city assistant parks director, that a nine-hole course, is moving forward.
City Parks and Recreation Department Gregg Bach said his department’s staff “is working with a group that expressed interest in adding a disc golf amenity to Sun Ray Park.
“The department plans to engage residents who live
in the neighborhood near
the park and evaluate community interest. After that process is completed, the department plans to take the item to the Parks and Recreation Board with a recommendation.”
Butler said parks officials asked him to do public fundraising for the baskets, which cost between $400-$500 apiece.
Butler hopes to bring his campaign to the Parks and Rec Board next month.
“I’ve started fundraising and I’ve got quite a response,” Butler said. “By the time this project gets approved by the parks board, we will have all the capital and we’ll be able to get the installation going as quickly as the city can move.”
Butler has set up a Facebook page, “Phoenix Sun Ray Park Disc Golf Course Project,” with updates on his campaign and advice on how community members can help.
He has also posted a proposed layout of the course on that page.
If the course moves forward to the design phase, Stone said the rec board will ask citizens to raise $5,000 to pay for it – “something that’s pretty doable,” he said.
Butler is looking forward to bringing a game that people of all ages can play to his local community.
“I have people in my immediate friend group, I have people that I’m meeting weekly who are very excited about the potential of the course because they’re familiar with the game,” he said, “but they know that there’s nowhere within 20 miles of our community here where they can play.”
(WHTM) — August 7 is National Disc Golf Day. The holiday celebrates the sport of tossing small, heavy frisbees into disc golf baskets.
Here are 35 disc golf courses around the Midstate where you can test your disc-throwing skills this weekend:
Rhodes Grove Disc Golf Course
A nine-hole course in Chambersburg with a few hills and woods by the Rhodes Grove Camp and Conference Center.
Wilson College
Located right on campus in Chambersburg, Wilson hosts a nine-hole course with the first tee located right by the library.
D. F. Buchmiller Park Disc Golf Course
Located in Lancaster, this 18-hole course is located right next to D.F Buchmiller County Park off of Route 222/272.
Mini Disc Golf Course at Mushroom Manor
If you want to work on your short game, this 18-hole mini-golf course in Lancaster is fit for you. Baskets are smaller along with all sorts of mini-golf-like challenges throughout.
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Hobson Park Mini Disc Golf Course
In Lancaster, it is known as the world’s first 18-hole public mini disc golf course. Make sure your frisbees are less than 4.5 inches in diameter so that they can properly fit in the baskets.
Manor Township Disc Golf Course
A short nine holes in Lancaster that borders a grassy park. A map is suggested.
Overlook Community Park
A full 18 holes in Lancaster with varying lengths in an open field.
Herr Park Disc Golf Course
A true variety test in Lancaster over 18 holes.
South Hills Park
Lebanon’s South Hills Park has 36 holes technically. Each hole has two baskets, a yellow for shorter games and red for longer. Give them both a try!
Lenni Lenape Park
Lenni Lenape Park in Lebanon is a course that starts out easy before it meanders its way into the woods in the middle of the 18. Don’t stress, as the course opens up again towards the end.
Mt. Lebanon Camp Meeting
A short nine-hole course in Lebanon, but just because it’s short doesn’t mean it’s easy. The woods along with a creek provide some difficulty.
Red Land High School Disc Golf Course
Also in Lewisberry, this course spans 18 holes around the campus of Red Land High School.
Pinchot State Park
This Lewisberry location has two courses. Boulder Woods has tight fairways while Quaker’s Challenge has more challenging greens. Both courses are 18 holes.
Adventure Park Disc Golf Course
Mechanicsburg’s Adventure Park features nine longer holes with different three different tees to start from.
Monroe Township PA Disc Golf Course
A practice six-hole course in Joe Carr Park in Mechanicsburg. Great view of all the sports fields.
Soldiers and Sailors Mini Disc Golf Course
A mini nine-hole course in Mechanicsburg, make sure you break out the smaller discs. Two tees for each hole that surrounds the football stadium.
Messiah Lifeways Disc Golf Course
A short nine-hole course in Mechanicsburg that’s located next to a retirement facility along Route 15.
Bethany Village
A nine-hole practice course in Mechanicsburg. Very short with a mix of open and treed holes.
Simpson Park Disc Golf Course
A pitch and putt course of nine-holes in Mechanicsburg. Make sure to keep an eye out for pedestrians.
Papa Jack’s Disc Golf Course
Inside Shippensburg Township Park, Papa Jack’s features nine holes that are mostly short but offer a variety of difficulty.
New Hopewell Disc Golf Course
This course in Shippensburg has a little bit of everything over 18 holes.
Beaver Creek Mini Disc Golf Course
While mini is in the name, these 18 holes in Strasburg sit on the largest known and most challenging mini disc golf course. Sitting right in Amish country, there’s farmland, ponds, and streams throughout.
Codorus State Park
Located in Hanover, Codorus State Park has a red, blue, and purple course. All are 18 holes.
Coyote Hills
Carlisle’s Coyote Hills has 18 challenging holes that’ll test your accuracy and maybe even your patience too.
Creekside Disc Golf Course
As the name implies, this 18-hole course sits by Ridley Park in Camp Hill alongside the creek. Plenty of other sports options available as well.
East Hanover Township Community park
Grantville features this 18-hole course with some beautiful hills and woods.
Elizabethtown College
On-campus at E-town, this 18-hole course sprawls all over campus, so make sure you have a map handy!
Hickory Heights
An 18-hole course in Spring Grove that sits on the back nine of a regular golf course.
Hotel Hershey
Chocolatetown has a short nine-hole course that’s well maintained and takes you through a short journey around Hershey.
Laserdome Mini Disc Golf Course
If you’re in the Manheim area but are looking for something a little calmer than laser tag, the Laserdome has an 18-hole mini-course just outside.
Little Chiques Park
An open and flat nine-holes in Mount Joy. Surrounded by Little Chiques Creek.
Samuel S. Lewis State Park
A park in York with a great view of the river in a diverse nine-hole course.
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Spring Meadows Disc Golf Course
The nine-hole course in Boiling Springs is nice and wide open, with holes that are all uniquely their own.
Willow Mill Park
A nine-hole course in Silver Spring that sits next to the water. Nice wide open and easy holes that surround the park.
Dee and Vaughn Dyer stand in their home in Bowdoin. Eighteen years ago Vaughn made the bold move of planning a wedding without Dee’s knowledge and brought her to the church under the pretense of attending someone else’s wedding. Once there, he dropped to a knee and asked her to marry him at that very moment. Andree Kehn/Sun Journal
It is said that in the spring, a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.
And when that happens, that young man’s thoughts soon turn — not so lightly — to thoughts of engagement rings. Wedding dates. Marriage proposals so elaborate the question-posers are undoubtedly ready for the altar and all that follows.
We asked our readers how they went about proposing marriage. The stories that came in were wild and varied. From ambush-style proposals to long-game sneakiness a year or more in the planning.
We’ve got double fakes. We’ve got ladies proposing to men. We’ve got proposals being popped all over the place, from the highest mountains to the lush green of the disc golf course.
We begin with one patient and careful fellow who more or less gathered an army to make his proposal work just right.
‘ONE BIG KABOOM!’ VAUGHN DYER’S CONSPIRACY TO COMMIT MARRIAGE
Vaughn Dyer was in a quandary.
A retired cop, Vaughn was 57 years old and in love with a woman he’d been with for seven years.
He wanted to marry her, that much was clear. He wanted her to have a big ol’ wedding, with friends and family and all the usual pomp and hoopla.
He DIDN’T, however, want his lady to have to go through all the stress and strain of planning a wedding. His beloved had a touch of anxiety and Vaughn wanted to spare her the stress.
So he went to work — about a year’s worth of work, as it turned out.
And my, how his plan came together when it was go time.
It was Oct. 23 in 2004 and as far as Diane Larrabee knew, she was simply going to watch Vaughn perform as part of the Kora Highlanders bagpipe band. She’d watched him perform many times before. This was nothing new.
“He said, ‘You know, the 23rd of October, we’ve got to play at a wedding in Cape Elizabeth and the wives are invited,’” recalls Diane, 54. “So that’s how he got me to the church.”
They got to the church, all right, and things took a turn for the surreal.
They were at the Spurwink Church in Cape Elizabeth. Diane was so nonplussed about the event, she had taken a nice, easy nap prior to to the event. But once they arrived, strange things began to happen.
Why did Vaughn suddenly stop and turn to address her? Why was everybody in the church staring at her so fixedly and why were there so many familiar faces out there?
“He proposed,” Diane says. “Right there in front of everybody. I had no idea it was coming. I thought I was going to someone ELSE’S wedding and it’s a big, elaborate proposal, instead.”
But it was more than that. Vaughn wanted to get married right there, on the spot. First, he needed Diane’s answer.
“He said, ‘If you say no, we’ll just have a great big party,’” Diane says. “‘If you say yes, we’re going to do it right now. We’re going to get married.’ I was so nervous when I realized what was taking place.”
If she was nervous about the logistics of the affair, she needn’t have worried. Vaughn had taken care of literally everything, from the guest list to the licenses to matrons of honor and best men.
When she finally gathered herself enough to look around, she began to realize this. Pretty much everyone she held dear was in attendance.
Dee and Vaughn Dyer look at their wedding video from 18 years ago. Andree Kehn/Sun Journal
“My two daughters were there and they were my matrons of honor,” she said. “My son was there and walked me down the aisle. There were five of us girls who have been very close since grade school and so they were in it, too. They were bridesmaids. My granddaughter was junior bridesmaid and my grandson was the ring bearer. Vaughn’s two boys were his best men.”
The town manager and town clerk were in attendance to sign the marriage license. The minister who was to marry them was a member of the Kora Highlanders.
And speaking of the Highlanders, Vaughn hadn’t lied when he said they were there to play for a wedding.
“They played as we walked down the aisle,” Diane says.
The wedding went off without a hitch, but that was hardly the end of Vaughn’s schemes. There was the reception and the honeymoon to consider.
They had a reception at a hall just down the road from the church. Vaughn had booked the place and his surprises just kept coming.
“My brother was in a band called Flashback so they played to the reception,” Diane says. “Vaughn’s daughter-in-law makes cakes, so she made one all in seashell motif. His mom, two sisters and brother-in-law and my mother did all the cooking.”
They even had moonshine, straight out of the hills of North Carolina. It was all such a fun and lavish time, it would have been really too bad if Diane had to go straight back to work the following day.
But, nope. Vaughn had that covered as well.
“My boss had come to the wedding,” Diane says, “and he said, ‘You have next week off.’”
Diane’s family had come up from North Carolina and there were already several trips planned with the happy couple. You name a component of a wedding, Vaughn had planned for it.
For Diane, widowed and headed into her second marriage, it was exactly what she needed.
“I have anxiety attacks and all that,” she says. “He knew I would have stress and so he just removed the stress from it by doing everything for me. He did it all with one big kaboom.”
Vaughn himself is a humble fellow and a man of few words. He said it took him roughly a year to plan everything out with the help of some co-conspirators.
“It was a blast!” he says. “I had a lot of help from friends and family putting it all together.”
Did he miss anything?
Diane doesn’t think so.
“He had every aspect covered,” she says. “He is the man with the plan.”
Jessica and Skot Waite, of Auburn, who deftly handled the day when two proposals almost collided. Submitted photo
A HALLOWEEN PROPOSAL WITH A TWIST
Jessica Waite, of Auburn, proposed to her boyfriend the night before Halloween at their favorite club. That story would be cool enough on its own.
But wait! There’s more!
As it turns out, the only reason Jessica was able to propose was because she happened to beat her boyfriend, Skot Pearson, to the punch.
Jessica’s best friend, Michael Theberge, is here to explain. This is a man who considers the couple a part of his family so he knew full well that Halloween was an important part of their romance. He also knew they were deeply in love, so it was no surprise that they would want to get married.
It just didn’t go quite as Theberge had imagined it would.
“Skot pulls me aside and tells me he is going to propose to Jess on Halloween,” Theberge recalls. “I’m thinking, that is incredible because I know how they love that holiday.”
That’s when the twist came into play.
“I swear, not even two hours later, Jess pulls me aside and tells me SHE was going to propose to Skot on Halloween,” Theberge says. “Now I’m stuck between a rock and a hard place. Do I say something or do I just let it play out? I was really torn.”
What was unfolding before Theberge’s eyes was potential calamity. Two people unknowingly racing toward a proposal? How would THAT play out?
Theberge had to help either Jessica or Skot to smooth this along. But how to decide?
“Jess is a little go-getter,” Theberge says, “So in the end, I decided my money was on her — and I was right. We did much of the planning right under Skot’s nose — thought for sure he’d figured it out, but he didn’t.”
Then came the Saturday night preceding Halloween. Jessica and Skot were among friends at an Auburn club. Jessica was ready to make her move. She had been planning for this moment since June of 2021 and she had co-conspirators.
“I spoke with the owner of our favorite hangout, the Craftbrew Underground (in Auburn),” Jessica explains. “He was so happy to be a part of our story and did all he could to help things go smoothly.”
When the time came and the moment felt right, the bartender was cued to play the song “Love at First Fright” by the Murderdolls, which happened to be Jessica and Skot’s favorite. Excited by this, Skot got up and began to dance around.
“I asked him to sit down — he thought it was because he was being too rowdy,” Jessica says. “I got down on one knee . . .”
Yup, she was doing it, right there in the club. Video of the event shows Jessica kneeling before a seated Skot, who looks utterly perplexed by the vanishing of the song and by the sudden interest of the crowd.
“Skot was so caught off guard,” Jessica says now.
“It actually took a minute for him to figure out she was asking for real,” says Theberge. “It was fantastic.”
In the video, Jessica presents Skot with a ring. For a moment, he looks only confused. Then realization dawns. He takes the ring and dutifully slides it onto Jessica’s finger.
The deal is done. The couple are now engaged. Skot stands and lifts Jessica to her feet and the crowd applauds.
For Jessica, the moment stands as one of her finest. The couple had endured a lot together. In 2012, on the anniversary of their first date, the couple was in a bike accident — an accident that left Skot with a fractured skull and which nearly cost Jessica her dominant arm.
Shortly after that, Jessica learned she was pregnant. But the couple managed through the crash ordeal together and made it all the way to the altar, thanks to some Halloween shenanigans.
“He has been my rock,” Jessica says, “and gave me my other favorite person: Coraline Rose, our 8-year-old daughter. He is an amazing partner and the best father.”
Ben and Kimberly stand at Sabattus Disc Golf after Ben made one of his most important pitches ever. Submitted photo
LOVE ON THE LINKS
Ben Levasseur had been dating his girlfriend, Kimberly, for four years when he decided to pop the question.
The pressure to come up with a unique and apropos wedding proposal can be immense for a young man, so once the decision was made, Ben got planning.
He tells the story of how it all went down in 2015.
“I started to plan in April for our fifth dating anniversary, which is June 6th. I figured that would be a great day to propose — now to figure out how? Much brainstorming went into it with my family. It was finally decided that it would be great to propose where we had met: Sabattus Disc Golf. She worked there while I was a regular. I contacted the owner and told him what my plan was. He was pumped and told me he would accommodate any way he could.”
Ben got in touch with a photographer, who was excited to shoot her very first wedding proposal. Now to put the plan in action.
“The day eventually came,” Ben says. “I had told her we had plans for that night and she should get her nails done with my sisters. She chose orange for her nails — my sisters instantly looked at each other and said ‘She has no idea he’s proposing.’
“After the nails,” Ben continues, “I told her it would be nice to go play a round of disc golf to celebrate our first date and where we met. When we got to the course and parked, we saw the owner of the course with our photographer. He played it off that the photographer was there to take promotional pictures for the course and that maybe we will see each other on the course.”
The couple got down to a rousing game of disc golf.
“And by the way, my game was awful,” Ben says. “It was the last thing on my mind. When we got to the hole (where) I was going to propose, the owner and photographer were there and said they would take some action shots of the throws.”
Ben threw first. Then it was Kimberly’s turn. Just another game of disc golf, nothing to see here. Until, that is, Ben pulled out a box of caramel popcorn.
“I had always joked with her that when I proposed to her that the ring was going to come from a Cracker Jack box,” Ben says, “So during her throw, I was behind her and nodded to the photographer. I got on my knee with my Cracker Jack box and then she turned around after her throw and saw me kneeling. She was shocked. I don’t remember exactly what I said, but I do know I asked her to marry me.”
At first, Kimberly could manage only a single word. That word: “Seriously?”
But finally the reality of the moment became clear and she was ready for her answer. Her answer was yes. She would indeed be happy to marry Ben Levasseur.
“We kissed and hugged,” Ben recalls.
But what to do about the disc golf game? By that point, Kimberly had come to realize that the skulking photographer wasn’t there to shoot disc golf. She was there to take pictures of the happy couple.
“We decided to do a little photo shoot instead of finishing our game,” Ben says.
He had more surprises in store for his future wife.
“When we got into the car, I told her that I promised her parents we would stop by their house after we were done,” he says. “What I didn’t tell her was that both our families would be there for a surprise engagement party for us.”
This past November, the couple celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary. They are expecting their first child together in early April.
Chances are good that kid will turn out to be one heck of a disc golfer.
Wil and Brittney stand in her mom’s hospital room after Wil’s hasty but romantic elevator proposal. Submitted photo
WIL KRAMLICH’S KILLER PROPOSAL?
Wil Kramlich had a strange dilemma. His girlfriend’s mother was in the hospital being treated for a brain aneurysm. Since he felt it important that the woman be a part of his proposal to her daughter, Brittney, Will had planned to pop the question right there at her bedside.
“But on the way to the hospital,” Wil says, “I got worried that doing so would surprise her mother and kill her.”
You can understand the predicament. The Lewiston man had a nice thought that nonetheless could prove fatal. So he adjusted his plans.
“Instead, my wife and I went to get a snack from the hospital cafeteria, and I figured that was my chance.”
They were in the elevator when Wil got down on one knee and hit her with the Big Question.
“And I tell you what,” Wil says. “That was the fastest elevator ride ever, because I was still on one knee when the elevator door opened.”
There was nobody standing outside the elevator, but the moment did serve to hustle Brittney along with her answer. She said yes.
“When we got back to her mother’s room — which was really like an open room with not-so-private curtains — we told her the good news,” Wil says, “and she was both excited and not so surprised that it killed her. But little did we know, all the nurses working in that station slowly descended on us until we heard some sniffling, and they were like: ‘That is so beautiful.’ And then one of them offered to take our picture, which ended up being the least-memorable photo ever — except it’s special to us.”
Wil proposed on Dec. 5, 2014. He and Brittney were married Sept. 3, 2016. Their first daughter, Avery, was born the following winter, followed two years later by their second daughter, Quinn As for Brittney’s mom, she survived that major aneurysm and has been enjoying her time with Brittney, Wil and her two granddaughters.
Karen Wilson and Todd Papianou of Rumford enjoying the snow that helped inspire Todd’s proposal. Submitted photo
KAREN WILSON AND TODD PAPIANOU’S WHITE POWDER ROMANCE
“My husband and I love skiing,” Karen says. “We are experts and love a good powder day. We had been together for 6 years and living in Vermont. For one huge snowstorm, we went to ski Smugglers Notch ski area. It was an amazing day — incredible. Eighteen inches of light and fluffy snow, and we skied hard from first chair until 3:00.
“We took a break in the lodge and got a basket of fries. We were sharing them, and my husband looked up and said, ‘I want to spend the rest of my life skiing powder days with you. Will you marry me?’ I instantly began to cry, and said yes.
“People in the lodge heard us and clapped as he came over to me and kissed me. Best powder day ever! We have been married and skiing powder days together for almost 23 years now!”
CELENE BROOKE-BOULET AND THE DOUBLE SURPRISE PARTY
This lady thought she was playing a daring trick on her boyfriend. But as it turned out, her boyfriend, Dick Boulet, owner of what was then the Little Hobo restaurant in Lewiston, had a few tricks of his own. It was June of 1998.
“Dick and I had both been married before. We were in our 50s and had been dating for a year. His children — Kathy, Debbie and Mark — called me and explained they wanted to have a surprise birthday party for there dad, to be held at Kathy’s house. They took care of inviting people, the food, everything — my only job was to get him there.
“The day came and Dick decided he didn’t want to go to Kathy’s and I had to persuade him to go, then he wanted to watch something on TV so he said we could go later — no big deal! I was at wit’s ends, but he finally gave in to me and off we went. We drove up to the house and Dick kept pointing out cars that he recognized. Finally, we go into the house and everyone yells ‘SURPRISE’ and they sang ‘Happy Birthday.’”
Celene was convinced she had helped pull one over on Dick. He totally fell for the surprise. Isn’t it great when that happens?
With that in mind, she wasn’t prepared for what followed.
“Candles were lit on the cake and people were telling him to come blow them out,” she recalls. “Dick turned to me and said ‘Come help me’ but I said, ‘It’s your cake!’ He insisted so I went over to help and bent down to help him and the cake said ‘Celene, will you marry me?’ The diamond ring was on the cake — I guess I was the only one who didn’t have a clue.”
Well played, Dick. Two decades of wedded bliss followed the double surprise party.
“Such a sweet man,” Celene says. “We had 20 years together and Dick passed away in 2018. What memories I have of him.”
GERARD DENNISON GOES TO THE CHAPEL
It was Christmas in 1988 and Gerard Dennison was inspired. He was 39, his lady 41, and both were ready to be married. Now all Gerard had to do was pop that question.
“I gave it a lot of thought as to when and where would be the best place to do it, and it suddenly came to me. As a devout Catholic at the time, I thought the best romantic setting and place to do it would be in church. So I proposed to Patricia during Midnight Christmas Mass at St. Louis Church in New Auburn. She was very surprised and said ‘yes’ immediately.”
They were married June 24, 1989, at St. Louis Church in Auburn.
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