Welcome to golf-monthly.co.uk

Branding_print

Navigation


Birdies and Bogeys - teas and tees


JOHN THYNNE (assistant editor)

We drink a lot of tea at Golf Monthly and it's just struck me that beverage offerings from my colleagues vary as much as their golf games - and there doesn't seem to be a direct link between their ability at the great game and making a brew.

A tea round from equipment editor Jeremy Ellwood, for example, is as rare as a Brit winning a Major. The 6 (soon to be 5?) handicapper is notoriously slow to offer to make the drinks - but boy are they worth waiting for. Unlike the rest of us, he allows the tea bag to brew properly in the mug rather than swirling it round quickly and hoping for the best. He also manages to add just the right amount of milk (semi-skimmed, obviously) to each mug, catering to varying office tastes.

Which is more than can be said of one of our freelance designers (who shall remain nameless). I'm not one to turn down a cup of tea lightly but the offerings of Mr X have prompted me into delivering excuses, such as, "Thanks Mr X but I've had my fill today". I've no idea how he did it but the liquid in my last Mr X mug looked like something from Glastonbury and probably tasted like it too (I had to pick my moment and, "go and wash my mug" a couple of minutes later.) Mr X doesn't play golf by the way.

Anyway, I've rated the GM staff for tea-making and their handicaps are something like this.

Editor Mike Harris. Playing handicap: 7. Tea handicap: 10. (Mr Harris says he’s more of an Earl Grey man and struggles a bit with the PG Tips.)

Equipment editor Jeremy Ellwood. Playing handicap: 6. Tea handicap: 2. (Has the ability to be a scratch player. Needs to practise more.)

Instruction editor Neil Tappin. Playing handicap: 5. Tea handicap: 5. (Reliable tea maker, returning consistently good brews.)

Sub-editor Luke Norman. Playing handicap: 8. Tea handicap: unknown. (Makes tea very occasionally – has a tendency to “NR”.)

Travel and lifestyle editor Alicia Harney. Playing handicap: 24. Tea handicap: unknown. (Prefers those “fruit teas” that smell fantastic but taste bloody awful.)

Staff writer Paul O’Hagan. Playing handicap: 5. Tea handicap: 10. (Struggling to make single figures. Has the occasional outstanding round.)

Share this article

email this to a friend

  • Bookmark
  • Print
  • Comment

Click on a link below to share this article with your favourite link sharing site


Rate this Article

Rate this content

0 stars

0 Votes

Current Rating


Reader comments

Add your comments

No comments have been added yet. Be the first by adding yours below...

Add your comments

Please note that we review all comments before they will appear on our site.

Equipment Reviews

TaylorMade r7 Limited review

On test:

r7 Limited review

The TaylorMade r7 Limited offers players flight changes of up to...




Back to top

Golf Monthly magazine

February 2009 cover

What's in this issue?

Golf Monthly February 2009

Issue highlights

Find your nearest UK newsagent

Subscribe

Buy now and save up to 36%!

Subscribe

/




What do you think?

Take part in our latest poll...

Has the golfing world really missed Tiger Woods?

Poll

  • Yes (55%)
  • No (45%)

See all polls..



Sign up for the Golf Monthly newsletter

Sign up for the Golf Monthly newsletter

Get instruction tips, gear reviews and the latest golf news direct to your inbox

More information


Golf Monthly Competitions

Win one of 20 copies of The European Tour Yearbook 2009

Relive what was a truly momentous 12 months for the game of golf with the 21st edition of the European Tour Yearbook. We have 20 hot-off-the-press...

Enter competition



See all competitions