FORE Magazine

Top Menu

  • About Me
  • Contact Us
  • Home

Main Menu

  • Current Issue
  • Digital Book
  • Profiles
  • Sustainability
  • Travel
  • 19th Hole
  • Classic Course
  • FORE Her
  • More
    • Know the Rules
    • Handicap Hints
    • SCGA Junior
    • Where Are They Now?
    • News
    • Public Affairs
Sign in / Join

Login

Welcome! Login in to your account
Lost your password?

Lost Password

Back to login

logo

FORE Magazine

  • Current Issue
  • Digital Book
  • Profiles
  • Sustainability
  • Travel
  • 19th Hole
  • Classic Course
  • FORE Her
  • More
    • Know the Rules
    • Handicap Hints
    • SCGA Junior
    • Where Are They Now?
    • News
    • Public Affairs
FeaturedIn The ClubhouseSummer 2025The Podium
Home›Featured›Twilight Golf

Twilight Golf

By Richard Lowe
August 20, 2025
1904
0
Share:

Longer days, dreamy moments in the setting sun

DO WE SOCAL GOLFERS know how lucky we are? It wouldn’t surprise me to learn that most of us don’t think twice that our golf season never really ends. Just this year I played on New Year’s Day with my friend, Ted. We simply swapped our hats for beanies and by round’s end, we had taken off our sweatshirts; I am certain we have a new tradition. Now, with the days longer and warmer, I am reminded that there is another kind of golf I shouldn’t take for granted: twilight.

It’s not everyone’s favorite. Why start something you can’t finish? Why play when you’ve been exhausted by the day, risking sloppy form? I can’t argue with those reasons, but I love the dreamy quality of starting something when the day is supposed to be ending. It feels like stealing time, like stretching the hours beyond their limits while the rest of the world carries on. Stepping onto the fully warm grass as the sun hangs low, the sky a bursting mélange of blues and pinks and oranges, feels rejuvenating. Photographers call it “magic hour” and on a green, with the shadows of my partners yawning toward the fringe, I can’t say I disagree.

Twilight golf reduces the game to its simplest joys. The goal is still the same — ball, hole, advance — but how I get there feels different. As a 25 index, 18 holes always seems to have the added pressure of breaking 100. My mind becomes preoccupied with how close I’ll cut it.

However, these twilight outings, many times solo stints, involve a second ball to test Player B’s ability. On-course practice seems to hit differently. I certainly roll more putts. I’m suddenly more free and loose, swinging the club for the fun of it, and my slices only mean extending the evening walk while a pure shot is that much more sublime when wholly present.

In a culture of over-scheduling and hyper-notifying, twilight golf offers a different message: that life can be slow and intentional. There are no upcoming meetings, no incoming calls and nowhere to be except the putting surface in front of us, beckoning more gently than usual. Out here, the stresses of the day are allowed to be forgotten, filed away under tomorrow’s to-dos. I appreciate these hours and bask in them, for fall and winter are just around the corner to take them back.

Previous Article

Let the GHIN app set up your ...

Next Article

Work Harder, Not Smarter

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Richard Lowe

Related articles More from author

  • At The TurnFeaturedSummer 2025

    THE COLORS OF KAUA’I

    August 20, 2025
    By Tom Mackin
  • Summer 2023The Podium

    Only A Game? So Why am I So Damn Mad When I Play?

    July 21, 2023
    By David Weiss
  • FeaturedOn The TeeSpring 2025

    Club Spotlight

    May 14, 2025
    By admin
  • Spring 2022The Podium

    Fan-Demonium: Up Close & Personal at WMPO’s 16th

    April 21, 2022
    By Tom Mackin
  • Fall 2024In The ClubhouseThe Podium

    Practice-Shmactice

    October 16, 2024
    By George Fuller
  • The PodiumWinter 2024

    Fast Friends on the Links: Be Wary of the Guy Quoting Mayakovsky

    January 28, 2024
    By George Fuller

Recent Posts

  • FeaturedIn The ClubhouseSpring 2025

    Original Wonder Woman

  • FeaturedSummer 2025

    SCARECROW

  • FeaturedSpring 2025Travel

    The Heart of Idaho

  • 19th HoleFeaturedIn The ClubhouseSummer 2025

    Revenge Dining

  • FeaturedFirst CutOn The TeeSpring 2025

    Rage or Sage

FeaturedSummer 2025

SCARECROW

Golfers can expect massive fairways, plenty of bailout areas, wild and creative contours and multiple routes to the greens.
  • LOFTY STAGE

    By Tod Leonard
    August 20, 2025
  • Players Welcome

    By Judd Spicer
    August 20, 2025
  • Beyond Sustainability

    By Robert Earle Howells
    August 20, 2025
  • CABO EVOLVES

    By Joe Passov
    August 20, 2025
© 2016 FORE Magazine About Us | Contact Us | Advertise