Published July 15, 2008 12:49 am - Golfing is a great summer acitivity for kids, and it's as easy as just showing up.
Child's Play: Getting kids on the turf
Sometimes it's as easy as just showing up
By Shane Frederick
Free Press Staff Writer
MANKATO
—
When it comes to teaching children how to play golf, Jerry Mosca has just two pieces of advice: “Swing it and have fun,” the longtime teaching pro said.
Simple stuff for what is often times viewed as a not-so-simple sport to get the hang of.
But getting kids to enjoy the game can be as easy as just showing up, whether it’s to the golf course or the driving range.
“I always think kids are the seed for the future of the game of golf,” Mosca said. “When kids and their parents start playing golf ... often times you see the whole family starting playing.
“It’s a wonderful, vicious circle. That’s what I like to call it.”
In Mankato and North Mankato, there are a few options for families who want to get their young kids on the course. There are three public golf courses in the two towns and three driving ranges, along with several public courses in the surrounding area.
One popular place to take kids, especially pre-teens, is the executive (par 3) track at Terrace View Golf Course.
“It’s wonderful for kids,” said Mosca, who has taught lessons for the last 19 years, including 13 years at Terrace View and the last six at North Links Golf Course in North Mankato. “Mankato, overall, is not a bad situation for kids and beginners.”
Mosca is teaching lessons through the Mankato YMCA this week at North Links. Terrace View’s junior lessons, which more than 300 kids ages 7 to 14 participated in, according to manager and director of golf, Tim Johnson, ended last week.
But you don’t necessarily have to enroll in lessons or classes to begin.
Last week, the Minnesota Golf Association sponsored a “Bring Your Family to the Golf Course” program designed to get more families involved in the game.
Twenty courses around the state — although none locally — participated in the week-long event, which allowed kids 18 and under to golf for free when accompanied by a paying adult.
“We recognize the key role that families play in introducing the game to a new generation of golfers,” Tom Ryan, the MGA’s executive director and chief operating officer, said in a press release about the program.
Terrace View’s Johnson agreed and said he sees dads, moms and, lately, a lot of grandparents bringing young children to play on the executive course, which is across Highway 22 from the clubhouse and regulation nine-hole golf course.
“I’ve seen a lot more of that, which I think is great,” Johnson said. “It’s a great place to learn how to golf.”