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Kim Hastie

2026 Member Handbook now available

By Handbook, Home News, Events

The 2026 Program of Events is now finalised and the Member Handbook has gone out in the mail.

As events can change, to keep up to date please check this website for events updates and details.

If you don’t wish to receive a Hardcopy, please advise the Secretary.

It can be emailed to you as a PDF document, or it can be viewed at end of the page Home Page.

Click link or button below to view the 2026 Handbook.

Click Here for 2026 Member Handbook

Magnetic Name badge.

All members receive a Name badge

To assist us please remember to wear it when attending one of our events.

Dinner report – Wednesday 26th February – Metropolitan GC

By 2025, Home News

2025 is here and we opened the Society’s calendar with a dinner at Metropolitan Golf Club

Our guest speaker was world No 1 Senior Women’s Amateur Champion & Victorian Nadene Gole

Lyn Swinburne Past President of Royal Melbourne Golf Club kindly agreed to conduct Q& A interview with Nadene.

Thanks to John Trevorrow for this report –

The first GSA dinner event for 2025 was a fascinating conversation with a Melbourne woman who went back to top-level competitive golf after a 20-year break and is now the World Number 1 ranked senior women’s amateur in the world.

Nadene Gole held the audience spellbound as she told how she won the world’s two most prized senior women’s amateur events within the space of nine dramatic weeks in 2024.

The format for the dinner at Metropolitan Golf Club was a Q&A conversation between Nadene and Lyn Swinburne, former president of Royal Melbourne GC, in front of a dinner audience of more than 70 GSA members and guests.

Nadene is now 56 and recounted growing up in Traralgon in the Latrobe Valley and taking up golf while in high school. Golf tuition as a schoolgirl was just 50 cents a lesson. By her 20s, she was good enough to turn pro and she competed for several years on the Japanese and European tours, winning the Danish Women’s Open in 1996.

She took a 20-year break from top-level golf when children came along. (They are now aged 26 and 23). Nadene played little golf until deciding to join Victoria Golf Club in 2014, and regained her amateur status in 2019. She then began playing pennant golf, and in 2022 her competitive nature re-surfaced and she threw herself into a serious crack at senior (over-50) women’s amateur golf.

In 2023, Nadene swept the field in Australia, winning all six women’s senior amateur state titles and the Australian national senior title. In 2024, international invitations arrived, and she became the first Australian woman to win the R&A Senior Women’s and the USGA Senior Women’s amateur titles.

Her R&A Senior Women’s Amateur Championship victory came at Saunton GC in Devon, England, last July where she prevailed on the second hole of a playoff after 72 holes of stroke play. Her caddie was her husband Sam, who she also described as her “mental coach”.

Nadene stunned the audience by recounting how Sam suddenly became seriously ill about a week after arriving home in Melbourne from the UK. He went to hospital where sepsis was diagnosed, and he was within 12 to 18 hours of dying. Fortunately, Sam has almost fully recovered from his near-death experience.

In September, just nine weeks after her R&A victory, Nadene travelled to the US to compete in the US Senior Women’s Amateur at Broadmoor Golf Club in Seattle. It is a gruelling event involving 10 rounds of golf in 8 days to make the final. She won 3&2 on the 16th green in the final against Canadian Shelly Stouffer.

Nadene was asked about the most important attributes for her success, and she said the key for her was resilience, performance and belief. Her golf journey is continuing, and the latest milestone is being selected to represent Australia in the Women’s Amateur Asia-Pacific championship. Nadene at 56 is the oldest competitor among 95 women who will tee up at Hoiana Shores Golf Club in Vietnam.

“My two children didn’t even know that I played pro golf. And now their Mum has been picked to play for Australia, they think it’s pretty cool,” Nadene laughed.

The Golf Society thanks Nadene Gole and Lyn Swinburne for their time in a delightful dinner conversation, and the staff at Metropolitan GC for the presentation of the evening.

  Nadene with her US Women’s Senior Amateur trophy         

Hickory Heroes – End of Year Break up event – Woodlands GC

By Events, 2024

The end-of-year event at Woodlands GC attracted the biggest turn-out of Hickory Heroes players for the year.

Twenty-three players, many in period clothing, teed up on a beautiful afternoon at the sandbelt gem of a course in Mordialloc on December 11th. We played 12 holes – the same number of holes at Prestwick GC in the founding years from 1860 of the Open Championship on Scotland’s Ayrshire coast.

Handicaps were adjusted with the hickory bonus strokes using the BGCS formula, and scores varied, as usual!

Winner of the day was Cheryle Nye with 25 Stableford points for 12 holes. Her prize was a pack of three books in the ‘Caddie’ series of novels by US author John Coyne. These were donated by GSA member Ian Weir.

Runner-up was Paul Burgess on 22 points, ahead of Andrew Thomson on a countback.

Nearest-the-pin on Hole 11 was won by Ian Monks.

Paul, a 60-year Woodlands member recently elevated to Life Membership, arranged the grounds staff to cut 18 holes in the practice green, laid out to reflect the original routing from about 1926 of the Woodlands course.

Players were issued replica golf cards from the mid-1920s and challenged themselves in a putting comp. Much fun was had on the tricky contours. The winner was Dean Mottram with 33 putts over ’18 holes’, and his prize was a hickory-shafted putter from the 1920s stamped Spalding Thistle. Next best was Mango Maguire with 34 putts.

Most players were able to stay on for a delightful BBQ buffet dinner in the Members’ bar overlooking the first fairway, and much chat ensued about shots good and bad.

The Golf Society thanks Woodlands Golf Club for the typically warm hospitality, and Paul Burgess for hosting our happy group.

Hover on images for details

Presidents Report plus -Annual Meeting Day & Doug Bachli Trophy wrap

By Home News, Events, 2024

As another successful year for the Society draws to a close, I reflect on a few of the activities.

The second half of the year has been a busy one. The Don Lawrence Trophy rescheduling, a talk by Sydney based Sports Historian Dr Michael Sheret and a late Golf Historians forum in Shepparton, all made for a condensed program of events, nevertheless and pleasingly they were successfully run and won.

A highlight of the year was our dinners, we were fortunate to have three interesting and entertaining speakers in Dr Joshua Ralston, Sandy Jamieson, and Graham Marsh.

This past year work on the GA heritage collection, including a magazine & journal audit, the re formatting some old tapes and films and planning for deaccessioning items.

In our hickory events, we had the successful running of the Inaugural Victorian Hickory Shaft Championships at Barwon Heads GC.. pleasingly this event looks to have a solid future.

At the recent 43rd AGM we gave special thanks to Greg Bain, who retired from the Committee after serving six years. In late 2018, Greg took over as the Long Game editor. His publishing background and enthusiasm for the role ensured we have had many  years of interesting and enjoyable reading. This past year he initiated and oversaw a rebranding refresh to the print formats and layout quality to standardize our look.

An example of  “our latest look” can be seen in our banner.

Our popular Annual Meeting Day and final golf event for the year, the Doug Bachli Trophy, was won by one of our new members Clayton Gunning. Hailing from WA, Clayton and two new fellow members made the most of their Melbourne visit, enjoying the many great courses we offer. We thoroughly enjoyed having them join us.

The trophy presentation this year was quite special with Doug Bachli’s daughter and grandson doing the honours.

Michelle Bachli paid tribute to her late father, the first Society President and brilliant golfer who won world in in 1954 when he become the first Australian to win the British Amateur Championship.

Lastly to the Committee, I give my sincere thanks. They contribute in many ways and I very much value their input and appreciate the time they give.

Committee elections, congratulations to those re-elected and welcome to our two new Committee members in Martin Maguire and Doug Turek.

My thanks to everyone who attended our events this year. Organising and running events is not without its challenges and so your participation and ongoing support is much appreciated.

Lastly the Society appreciates, the wonderful hospitality given by the many clubs we visited during the year.

Wishing everyone a Happy and Healthy festive holiday season

Good golfing and enjoy the summer tournament season we have coming up.

Annual Hickory Day- 18 August Frankston GC

By Events, 2024

The 2024 Annual Hickory Day has been run and won at Frankston GC

21 players enjoyed a superb afternoon on this super little track for hickory golf.

Andrew Thomson won the Frank Sheperd Trophy

Unfortunately, due to insufficient entries the Burtta Cheney trophy for women was not awarded

A thoroughly enjoyable day and our sincere thanks to the Frankston GC for allowing Society to visit

Australian Hickory Shaft Championship – September – NSW

By Events, 2024

The 29th edition of the Australian Hickory Shaft Open Championship was recently played at Warringah, Manly and Cromer golf clubs in Sydney.

More than 50 keen hickory enthusiasts came from all over Australia, Japan, Canada, China and New Zealand, turning up with their 100-plus-year-old hickory clubs, most dressed in period clothing.

Craig Bernhardt (Manly) partnered Darron Watt (The Rock) with a 75 beating Brendan Barnes (Sawtell) and Scott Bower (Canada) on the count back on Canadian foursomes on day one at Warringah.

Singles at Manly was won by local member Dave Saunders with a 76 including a hole-in-one at the 127-metre 15th hole, the first in tournament history. The leading woman was Suz Brown, also a local from Manly GC.

Day two of the championship hosted by Cromer GC was a real test using the antique clubs with their tight fairways.

Best score on the day was Craig Bernhardt’s 73 but three players could not be separated for the Championship on 155 − Tim Sayers (78-76), Dave Saunders (76-78) and Justin Ryan from Bendigo (80-74). Alex Sutherland was one off the pace with 155.

The women’s champion was Suz Brown (198) ahead of Kim Hastie (Metropolitan) and Rie Mitsuhashi (Japan).

Handicap honours were dominated by overseas players with Suguru Nakase on 125, followed by Xing Xiao Jun (China) 130 and Peter van Eekelen (NZ) 133.

The over 70’s cup went to Brian Dolan (Concord) 169.

All the players were impressed with the quality and presentation of the three courses and are looking forward to next year’s event.

The championship is organised and administered by the Australian Golf Heritage Society.

Golf Historians Forum report – Shepparton GC

By Home News, Events, 2024

Shepparton Golf club founded in 1922 was the venue for the final Golf Historians Forum for the year.

Members of the club’s Centenary Committee warmly welcomed the Society members who travelled to Shepparton and in late October.

Committee members Neil Lavis, Sally Naylor, Rob Kelly, and Greta Keenan recounted the club’s evolution from when the golf was played in an ad hoc way around the district from about 1900.
An early golf club was formed in Shepparton 1909 but had no permanent course, and the club went into hibernation with the outbreak of the Great War.

The present club was found in 1922 and gained permissive occupancy of its land at its present site, opening a nine hole course in June 1924.
Within four years, the course was extended to 14 holes, and the club had 200 members.

In 1931, the club bought 8 hectares(20 acres) of adjoining land and expanded to 18 holes with sandscrapes for the putting.
The early 1950s saw electricity and the water supply connected, and more land purchased.

In 1955, course architect Sam Berriman was commissioned to design a new layout on the bigger land with grass greens.

A new clubhouse and improved course were opened in 1960, with the membership climbing to 1000.

In 1962, the club hosted a famous exhibition match between a young Jack Nicklaus , the reigning US Open champion and 1960 Australian Open winner, Bruce Devlin.

3000 spectators turned out to see both champions shoot 69 on a memorable day for the club.
The club has a series of historic photos from that day on display in the clubhouse, some of them signed by Nicholas himself. The original scorecard for the day is also displayed.

The 1970s &1980s, saw major improvements, more land bought and a focus on developing junior golf.

To facilitate this the club arranged for visiting golf coaches to help run clinics for up to 200 juniors from around the district.

In the late 1980s, the club fought for special permission to play a mixed team of boys and girls in the Goulburn Valley junior pennant competition
To further secure the clubs future they were finally be able to buy the original crown land that it occupied since 1922.
For the session we were treated to a short film depicting some wonderful early images of the course and on display were several artefacts and historical an photographs.
The clubs permanent display cabinets were a rich showcase of memorabilia not only of the Nicklaus- Devlin exhibition match but featured a section dedicated to a favourite son the late Jarrod Lyle.

During the forum, we were able to go out on course and expect the site of the original clubhouse near the 17th tee and also one of the original sand scrape greens which has been cleared and sign posted, it sits in rough amongst trees behind the 14th hole. It was lovely to see this small piece of the courses history retained.
Attendees stayed on site at the club, enjoyed a meal together in town and most played the course the next day.

Dinner – Monday 16 September 2024 – Riversdale Golf Club

By Events, 2024

The final Society dinner for the year was held at Riversdale Golf Club  

A “Life in Golf'”as a player, administrator and golf course architect

We were very fortunate to secure Graham Marsh as our speaker and member Tony Rule kindly conducted Q&A session with this Aussie golfing legend.

A bit about Graham …He was born in Kalgoorlie WA.  In 1969 he turned professional and won more than 64 tournaments on all five of the world’s major tours.

Voted Australian Sportsman of the year in 1977 and awarded the MBE in 1984.

Graham was also Chairman of the PGA Tour of Australasia for six years.

Graham Marsh Golf Design (GMGD) has been responsible for a number of the world’s leading residential, resort, private, and tournament golf courses, the result of his in-depth knowledge of the game and the intricacies required in golf course design.

Our thanks to John Trevorrow for this report

                       Riversdale GC dinner report Guest speaker Graham Marsh -September 2024  

The third Golf Society dinner for the year drew a large gathering of members and guests to hear a fireside chat with Australian golf legend Graham ‘Swampy’ Marsh MBE at Riversdale Golf Club. Royal Melbourne Captain Tony Rule sat down with the veteran professional to elicit some colourful stories from inside the tournament ropes and locker rooms over the decades, plus details about Graham’s second career, as a notable designer and builder of golf courses.

The dinner was attended by 86 guests at Riversdale Golf Club. Graham, the brother of Australian Test cricket wicket-keeper Rod, told how their father Ken loved both cricket and golf. After Graham broke his arm in several places as a child, the family doctor said he should swing a golf club as therapy once the plaster came off. Young Graham discovered a love for the game and quickly progressed, being selected for the WA state team at 18 and turning professional in 1969 aged 25, winning on the US, European and Japan tours. 

Marsh entertained the audience with tales from playing the Masters, many Australian Opens and the Open Championship 20 times. His best Open finish was 4th in 1983 at Royal Birkdale, ahead of Seve Ballesteros, Lee Trevino and Nick Faldo. Marsh shot a wonderful final round 64 on a day of fierce wind, and described how he got back to the locker room early where Arnold Palmer asked how he went. When told 64, Palmer responded: “How did you go on the back nine?” before telling Marsh not to go anywhere in case he had won the Claret Jug. During a nervous 3-hour wait, the wind dropped and Tom Watson went on to overhaul Marsh’s clubhouse lead and win his fifth Championship.

Aged 33, Marsh began to study the design genius of Alister MacKenzie and Harry Colt and later moved into his second career, establishing the Graham Marsh Golf Design company in 1986.

He received warm applause from the audience of Golf Society members and guests when he underscored the importance of golf history: “We have to know where we came from if we are to know where we are headed.”

 

Golf Historians forum – Monday 15 July – Keysborough Golf Club

By Events, Historians Forum 2023

Our second forum for the year will be at Keysborough Golf Club on Monday, 15 July 2024  11:00 am 

 Please join us and hear how the Keysborough Golf Club celebrated their 125-year anniversary and the way forward for the Club. 

11:00 am Light lunch – finger food, tea and coffee 

Program 

The General Manager – Darren Eckhardt has held his position for 20 years and is fully versed with the Clubs 125 celebrations and the way forward for the Club. He will take us on the journey of Keysborough Golf Club. 

The Golf Swing of 1850

Our second speaker is Brian Lowe – Golf Society member has a Masters Degree in Clinical Psychology. His publications across several disciplines include a paper on the forces generated in the golf swing by elite players.

His topic today reflects upon some of that research and other observations which touch on the golf swing of the 19th century and earlier.

There will be a Show and Questions time

There will also be an opportunity to play 9 / 18 holes of hickory or golf following the forum. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Presidents Trophy – Monday 29 July Royal Melbourne Golf Club

By Home News, Events, 2024

 President’s Trophy –   The Royal Melbourne Golf ClubMonday 29 July 2024   

 Report   The President’s Trophy drew a good-sized field of 30 players to Royal Melbourne GC on July 29th. The late winter afternoon was cool and light drizzle was persistent, but despite the weather there were some excellent scores returned on the famed West Course’s front nine.

The format for the President’s Trophy is 9 holes of stroke, with the top four qualifiers going on to sudden-death matchplay on the East Course to determine the winner. All players must choose only seven clubs for their day.

As the scorecards were collated, all players gathered for afternoon tea in the clubhouse’s MacKenzie Room in front of a welcome open fire.

RM historian and life member Moira Drew led the field with an excellent Nett 33.5. Fellow RM member Andrew Thomson was next with Nett 34, and he played off in a match against Mango Maguire, who played excellent golf in the qualifier, carding one over par for a Nett 34.5.

Four players returned nett cards of 37, and a countback determined Toby Cumming as the final qualifier, who faced Moira Drew in the first match. Toby won on their opening hole with a steady par four, and awaited the winner of the other match.

Andrew Thomson’s bag on the day contained a modern driver and six antique hickory clubs: a lofted spoon, three irons and a putter. He and Mango halved their first hole and moved to the difficult par-4 second.

Mango made a creditable bogey 5 after taking a penalty from an unplayable lie off his tee shot. Andrew was on the green in three with a stroke in hand, and holed a difficult second putt to win the match with a nett 4.

Toby and Andrew moved to the third hole for the deciding match. Both found the right-hand rough off the tee, and were in greenside bunkers for three. Escaping wet bunkers with an antique niblick is a difficult proposition, and Andrew went long into another trap. He sportingly conceded the hole and the President’s Trophy to Toby, as darkness began to close in on the match and the spectators who had gathered to watch the contest.

Player and spectators returned to the clubhouse for the presentations and a sumptuous post golf spread

Society President Kim Hastie thanked Royal Melbourne for its hospitality and for hosting another enjoyable day’s golf at its sublime venue.