Well, the easy answer is British Columbia.....
And, in case you're interested, it was unbelievable. In general, the ski world has endured the Season From Hell this year, and we should anticipate all sorts of water-related issues this summer, not least wild fires. But, unlike last year, the heli really delivered, three magical days that salavaged our ski season.
No one has yet looked at our primary video, taken on this fancy camera, but I have a couple of cellphone videos to give you a sense of the scale:
No need to watch the skier, just focus on where I'm skiing....
And here's one of a typical pick-up. The Ubers come in hot:
The issue is the vulnerability of the helos when on the ground. All is done to limit that duration.
I feel that I should try to get back to this blogging thing, especially as it's fifth-of-four week once again. I'll throw some words up today, and commit to a return visit later in the week as well. It can't be Wednesday, so circle Thursday or Friday on your calendars.
The Arnie - It was Daniel Berger's week, at least until it wasn't, quite the shame given that it would have been a great moment for a Jewish winner on Tour. Of course, golf remains hard and winning on Tour nearly impossible, so let's see what Shack has to say:
Turns out, the demise of Bay Hill’s greens was greatly exaggerated.The TifEagle Bermuda complexes were as fast as Riviera’s a few weeks ago, minus the ocean influence and subtle pitches. Still, the overseed-free surfaces in Orlando served up a combo platter of speed, firmness, and life-support yellow to demonstrate—yet again—how much more fun golf viewing is when there’s a little sizzle offsetting the power of today’s pasture-raised, lean-chicken eating superheroes.Akshay Bhatia and Daniel Berger were up to a task that felled bigger names, setting up Sunday’s two-man battle for the Arnold Palmer Invitational Presented By Mastercard. The two feistiest players of the week ended up in the tournament’s first playoff since 1999. There, they decided who’d be putting on the red cardigan, and it was ultimately Bhatia overcoming a five-stroke deficit with nine to go. He won with a two-putt par on the first hole of sudden death.
Yeah, they whined up a storm about those greens. What does this portend? Well, Christmas notwithstanding, it so happens that red and green don't mesh all that well:
I’m not sure if Bhatia’s performance portends to amazing things in Augusta since Bay Hill has never been a great predictor of Masters fate. But you can’t discount what Bhatia did on such firm, fast greens that had bigger names shaking their heads and waving white flags under “major-like” conditions.
The same goes for Berger, who almost had the first wire-to-wire win at the API since Jason Day in 2016. He performed far better in Strokes Gained tee-to-green (10.804/1st) and Strokes Gained: Approach the Green (7.914/1st) and would have grabbed an automatic invite into the Masters had he won. As a consolation prize, the 32-year-old receives the Open Qualifying Series spot into the 154th at Royal Birkdale. He will also jump from 61st in the world into the top 50, improving his chances of reaching The Masters via the March 30th OWGR top 50 cutoff.
It's supposed to be one of the Tour's most important events, yet its significance seems limited to seeding the field for April.
In fact, the events was of such import that it fails to gain a mention in this week's Tour Confidential roundtable. Mr. Rolapp will not be pleased. At least Shack has a little more that highlights pre-Augusta form (or the lack thereof):
Also…
- Ludvig Ã…berg (T3/-12) recorded his best finish since winning the 2025 Genesis at Torrey Pines and his first top-10 since the 2025 BMW Championship (T7). He was strong in all statistical categories, including gaining 5.361 strokes approaching the greens as he heads to TPC Sawgrass and next month, The Masters. Look out.
- With a final round 73, Scottie Scheffler (T24/-2) recorded his first finish outside the top 20 since the 2025 WM Phoenix Open (T25). For those with Magnolia Lane in mind, Scheffler’s approach play struggles continued: he lost nearly three strokes at the API approaching the greens, hitting just 44 of 72 greens and averaging a mediocre-by-his-standards 39’4” on his approaches (31st).
- Rory McIlroy withdrew ahead of the third round due to a back injury. “While warming up in the gym this morning, I felt a small twinge in my back,” he said in a statement. “As I started hitting balls on the range before the round, it worsened and developed into muscle spasms in my lower back. Unfortunately, I’m not able to continue and have to withdraw. I was excited to compete this weekend. I wish the Arnold Palmer Invitational a great finish and look forward to being back next year.”
McIlroy was T9 (72-68) after 36 holes. It was just the second time he’s withdrawn from a PGA Tour event. The last time was in 2013’s Honda Classic. He is still scheduled to defend his title at this week’s Players Championship.
- Jim Furyk had a strong four days as the lead analyst on Golf Channel’s coverage of the API. The former U.S. Open champion and Ryder Cup captain has an easy-on-the-ear approach and was not shy about offering insights, opinions, and background on players without trying too hard to show he came prepared. If he wants to do it more often, he’s got a nice future in broadcasting. Furyk will again work this week’s Players.
That's OK, JT, we didn't miss you either....
Scottie seems quite off his feed, and crankier than I can remember seeing him. As for Alas, Poor Furyk, I can only assume that Geoff listened in at different times than your humble blogger. What I heard was hesitating and trite, not that we should overinterpret his first week's work. I just didn't sense anything deeper, and he's hardly the guy that will amuse us....
Red On Red - Strange times, my friends.... Jon Rahm, in a prior lifetime, was one of the more thoughtful and historically-knowledgeable players on Tour. He made the most lucid argument for not cashing the LIV check, then did just that apparently under the influence of mushrooms or the like, deluding himself that his defection alone would require the tours to reunite. How's that working out, Jon?
Then the DP World Tour offers LIV defectors a deal to reclaim their Euro Trash membership, thereby ensuring 2027 Ryder Cup eligibility. Eight of the nine players eligible immediately accept said offer, you'll quickly have sussed out the one outlier. One assumes reasonable folks can disagree, but is Mr. Rahm being reasonable?
‘They’re extorting players’: Jon Rahm slams DP World Tour over demands he refused
Extortion? You work for folks that settle minor disputes with bonecutters, but those guys in Virginia Water are beyond the pale?
I'll allow the aforementioned TC panel to pick things up here:
Rory McIlroy sounded none too impressed by Jon Rahm’s decision to decline a DP World Tour deal that would have given Rahm a path back to DP World Tour membership and 2027 Ryder Cup eligibility. Rahm maintained that he should not be forced to play more than four DP tournaments this season instead of the six the tour is mandating (“I think we should be able to freely play where we want and have the choice to play where we want and not be dictated what we do,” Rahm said). But McIlroy countered that the tour’s offer was generous, and “there’s a reason that eight of the nine [LIV players] took it, because they probably think the same thing. And one guy thinks a little differently, and that’s a shame.” Who’s right here?Sean Zak: McIlroy is right. The DPWT offer is plenty generous. But if we really look at Rahm’s commitment to that tour over the years, it hasn’t been six events. It has often been three or four non-major events each year. I think we’re just learning he isn’t that crazy about helping the DPWT in ways his platform could, which is entirely his right. But the DPWT is also within its rights to uphold its rules and withhold its Ryder Cup if necessary.Dylan Dethier: Yeah, to Sean’s point, Rahm has the right to protect his time, he has the right to spend off weeks at home and he has the right to try to outmaneuver the DP World Tour, knowing what he brings to the table. But Rahm’s suggestion that the DP World Tour should just let LIV guys come and go as they please, all while LIV continues to double down as a direct competitor for DPWT’s players and markets? I don’t think that checks out. There’s a collision coming here that’s bigger than just Rahm, but this may accelerate the clash.Josh Sens: Rahm has the right to his choice and Rory is right to call it “a shame.” So many of the tensions and troubles in professional golf have to do with balancing the rights of the individual against the collective good. What Rahm is being asked to sacrifice seems, from the outside, to be minor in the grand scheme. But he sees it as “extortion.” It goes to show that when you are accustomed to extravagant privilege, reasonable requests seem like an imposition. It’s a bummer for fans. And not great for Rahm’s reputation either.
Sure, he's got a right to protect his valuable time, but he's so excessively entitled that he refuses to acknowledge that the Euro Tour has a business to protect. It's the anger that's so off-putting, making it easy to conclude that maybe he's been spending too much time with Phil.
There's a zero probability that Rahm wont be at Adare Manor. The players just seem committed to ensure that we hate each and every one of them before the game gets reunited. You know who's looking good these days? Yup, when Patrick reed is the adult in the room....
Venue Musings - JT had a great thought..... I mean, great as long as you don't inconvenience yourself with reality.....
It’s a touchy one that Europeans never want to hear about. Or worse, turns into a lecture about how the Ryder Cup funds all they do, as if the DP World Tour is primarily a humanitarian operation that just happens to play golf tournaments, too.“St Andrews, I think, is gold,” Thomas said on the latest episode of The Smylie Show. “I would love—I just don’t see how it’s physically possible—but somehow, someway, for a Ryder Cup at St Andrews,” the two-time PGA champion said.“There’s no way that could happen, but could you just imagine how sick that would be, and matches somehow coming down the Road Hole and coming down to 18? It would be epic, just so epic.”
It would be and it was for that recent Walker Cup.....
Actually, as The Quad laid out a few years ago, it can work and work better than a 144-player stroke play event. The hole sequencing, the strategies involved, and the footprint seen during massive Opens in St Andrews prove the Old Course is a better course and likely as lucrative as any course currently scheduled to host the Ryder Cup. The 2023 Walker Cup demonstrated how incredible the Old Course can be when it’s the third protagonist in a high-stakes match.
OMG, it could be so epic my head is about to explode.... Just this reality thing intrudes.
Hope you're in a calm place as Geoff lowers the hammer on our dreams:
Only one thing is preventing epic scenes of watching multiple matches out by the Eden Estuary. Or the dream scenario Thomas outlined: a Ryder Cup coming down to the Road hole on a crisp mid-September day.Money.You know, the very thing 2025’s European team did not need to turn up at Bethpage. And the same hurdle that’s driving the stalemate with Rahm. The tour wants its fine money and Rahm to play two events of their choosing because he took LIV money.Europe’s Ryder Cup model relies on a lavish package of government and course owner incentives to land the event. Typically, a few years of a forgettable DP World Tour stop are thrown in so everyone can study the forgettably overbuilt stinkers that only a Ryder Cup can make people pay to play.Does anyone really want to go back to The Belfry, K Club, Celtic Manor, the PGA Centenary at Gleneagles, or in 2031, a real estate development called Camiral Golf & Wellness? (At least Versailles’ Le Golf National and Rome’s Marco Simone were redesigned with match play in mind, while 2027’s Adare Manor exudes none of the commercial desperation seen with past rich-guy places.)
All we need to remind ourselves is that they've taken the event to Ireland twice in recent years, but haven't sniffed the coast.
Here's Geoff's rousing Coda:
St Andrews lacks a wealthy benefactor looking to juice real estate sales or fill up a resort by hosting a Ryder Cup. The town already has a DP World Tour stop, the annual Alfred Dunhill Links. Its Links Trust operation has a full tee sheet, thriving golf economy, and a date with The Open every five years.So if the Europeans want to prove that they’re not about the money, how about a 2035 Ryder Cup in St Andrews? It would fall between Opens in 2032 and 2037. Even better, Justin Thomas will be 41 and probably ready to accept an inevitable Captaincy. He’ll sing the praises of St Andrews and the European Tour Group for prioritizing venue over vig.Otherwise, spare us the lectures next time there’s the temptation to jump on those high horses and single out Legion XIII’s Jon Rahm.
Before LIV, there was perhaps a chance that this could have happened. But now the Euro Tour is such a weakened entity that they not only need the cash, they need it years in advancew.
But let me cheer you up. There's a non-trivial chance that the Saudis end up controlling the Euro Tour, so that 2035 Ryder Cup is less likely to be on the Old Course and more likely to find a home at Saudi Greens.
But lest you spiral into a profound depression, here's some venue news to cheer our souls. In a separate post, Geoff informs us of this recent USGA venue update:
Inverness will host the 145th U.S. Open in 2045. It will be the first U.S. Open at the Toledo, Ohio gem since Hale Irwin’s win in 1979. Designed by Donald Ross, the club was already scheduled to host the 2027 U.S. Women’s Open Presented by Ally and the 2029 U.S. Amateur. Inverness was also awarded the 2033 U.S. Girls’ Junior and the 2036 U.S. Women’s Amateur.National Golf Links of America will host the 2040 Walker Cup, a decade after hosting the previously-announced 2030 Curtis Cup. NGLA most recently hosted the 2013 Walker Cup.Cypress Point Club has been awarded the 2042 Curtis Cup and 2048 Walker Cup after successfully hosting last year’s incredible Walker Cup.Seminole Golf Club will host the 2046 Curtis Cup and 2052 Walker Cup following 2021’s mostly incredible, non-Breakers food-for-the-teams, Walker Cup.
Inverness is great, but those following three take your humble blogger's breath away.
Let you heart be light feasting on these names:
Future Curtis Cup Sites2026 – Bel Air Country Club, Los Angeles, Calif.2028 – Royal Dornoch, Dornoch, Scotland2030 – National Golf Links of America, Southampton, N.Y.2034 – Pine Valley Golf Club, Pine Hills, N.J.2038 – Bandon Dunes Golf Resort, Bandon, Ore.2042 – Cypress Point Club, Pebble Beach, Calif.2046 – Seminole Golf Club, Juno Beach, Calif.Future Walker Cup Sites2026 – Lahinch, County Clare, Republic of Ireland2028 – Bandon Dunes Golf Resort, Bandon, Ore.2030 – Prince’s Golf Club, Kent, England2032 – Oakmont Country Club, Oakmont, Pa.2036 – Chicago Golf Club, Wheaton, Ill.2040 – National Golf Links of America, Southampton, N.Y.2044 – Pine Valley Golf Club, Pine Hill, N.J.2048 – Cypress Point Club, Pebble Beach, Calif.2052 – Seminole Golf Club, Juno Beach, Calif.
I can't find a clunker on that list..... Dornoch? Pine Valley? geez, be still my foolish heart!
That will have t be it for today. Do we think I'm showing any skill at this blogging thing? Shall I give it another go later in the week?
Have a great week and I'm glad to be home and back with you.











