NCGA

By Jeffrey Ford


Dusk filtered across the summer fairways and quietly entered the Rancho Cañada cart barn
Where a boy lay weary on a wooden bench, spent after hours of cart washing, and cleaning,
And the tedious gleaning of the driving range.
Lulled by the hum of his charging carts, the boy dozed,
As Dusk gently massaged his bare feet, feet still too large for a boy’s body
He wiggled his toes and dreamed of places his feet had yet to visit,
How it would feel pressing the gas pedal of his own car.
Suddenly, the silhouette of two bikes swelled above him in the doorway
He leaped up laughing as his friends raced him to the barrel of lost clubs,
Intent to make one more mark on their day.
One club, one ball, one tee only
Light enough perhaps for two holes in the gloaming;
One played out, the other back in
As the ebb and flow of fairways go.
So, each boy took his glorious turn on the tee, with a tap, tap wiggle-waggle whack!
Launching their white filaments against the fading blue,
Skipping barefoot above the shimmering sea of grass
With no bags, no scorecard, and no shoes.
The heat of day woke the stuttering rain birds
Who sprayed a rainbow of water onto their delighted heads and the dry grass
As Old Man Windmill above the18th fairway circled his arms,
Urging them onto their final shots.
Then the boy felt a surge raising up from the earth through his bare feet
Into the graceful ease of his swing, exploding out the club head of his adopted 5- iron.
And the twin mirrors above his cheeks reflected the perfect flight of the ball
As it bounced once on the green, struck the pin, and dropped into the cup.
The boys hooted their joy as he raised his club to heaven
Like a shepherd in the dusk, memorizing his first sweet swing of perfection,
Blessing their young hearts with hope, and the promise of what might be.


In memory of Samuel Nicholas Ford (1/24/90-7/16/18)