Club builders on the Korn Ferry Tour keep pro golfers well-supplied

[ad_1]

FALMOUTH — After two and a half busy days, Justin Smith finally had some time to relax. Sitting in a blue camp chair, Smith started to explain what he and his crew do for a living.

“It’s like a restaurant,” he said. “These guys take the order, bring it to me, and I cook it up.”

Smith, 40, of Bowling Green, Kentucky, is the guy behind the scenes in the equipment trailer on the Korn Ferry Tour, the PGA’s top developmental level that is in Maine this week.

Justin Smith, a Korn Ferry Tour equipment technician, works on a golf club’s shaft that will later get a new head glued on during the Live and Work in Maine Open’s pro-am on Wednesday at Falmouth Country Club. Ben McCanna/Portland Press Herald Buy this Photo

Smith and his staff work on clubs so the tour’s professional golfers can play knowing their equipment is in tip-top shape.

Golfers on the Korn Ferry Tour seek spots on the PGA Tour.  This week, the Korn Ferry Tour is at Falmouth Country Club for the inaugural Live and Work in Maine Open. The tournament begins Thursday and runs through Sunday.

On Wednesday, the club hosted a pro-am tournament.

Smith and guys like Nathan Fritz, a 39-year old Titleist representative from Indianapolis, see themselves as pieces in the golfer’s development puzzle.

“I’m a fitting rep,” Fritz said, meaning he analyzes a golfer’s swing and performance to help the player choose the right clubs. “We have a putting rep here, a rep for shoes, a rep for balls. Our goal is to give the guys the best chance.”

If a Korn Ferry Tour player needs it, he can get it at the equipment trailer, from new clubs to new spikes for his shoes.

The trailer was parked behind the Falmouth Country Club pro shop for two and a half days this week. It was open from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Monday and Tuesday, as well as 7 a.m. to noon Wednesday. By the time the tournament begins Thursday morning, the trailer and all the golf company reps are gone, on to the tour’s next stop. If the trailer has a nickname, something groan-inducing like the Club Hub or simple like the Workshop, Smith wasn’t inclined to share it.

The trailer is adorned with images of golfers who graduated from the Korn Ferry Tour to the PGA Tour. Some are recent grads, including the 2017 Korn Ferry class of Sebastian Munoz and Abraham Ancer. Some are now veterans on the PGA Tour, like Brandt Snedeker (Class of 2006) and Tony Finau (Class of 2014). Getting on the trailer means you’re moving on and you’re not expected back.

It’s a mobile, air-conditioned golf club laboratory. There’s a sign on the door. “Notice. No Caddies-Players.”

Pro golfer Harry Hall of Cornwall, England, practices his swing on the driving range during a pro-am event Wednesday at Falmouth Country Club. Golfers are competing this week in the Korn Ferry Tour’s Live and Work in Maine Open. Ben McCanna/Portland Press Herald Buy this Photo

You tell your rep what you want, and you wait. It will come. What players want varies from course to course, tournament to tournament. With the tree line tight around the fairways at Falmouth Country Club, players want different clubs than they will in two weeks at the tour’s next stop, the TPC Colorado Championship, where the course will be more wide open.

“Here on hole No. 1, guys aren’t even hitting driver. They’re using driving irons,” Fritz said.

A popular task in the trailer is replacing wedge heads. The average tour player may go through three or four wedge heads in a season, although Smith said some will tear through six or seven. Often, players simply want to test something new during a practice round or pro-am.

“It could be as simple as, ‘I played with so-and-so and he has this (club) shaft I want to try,’” Smith said.

Smith discovered this career 16 years ago, when a buddy who worked in the business told him about an opening making clubs. In 2013, he took a job building clubs on the PGA Tour. In January 2020, Smith joined the Korn Ferry Tour. Working in golf has allowed Smith to visit 48 states, and the travel isn’t as frequent as one might think. He estimated he’s on the road 80 days a year.

Fritz played golf at the University of Texas-El Paso and gave it a shot as a professional player before realizing any career he built in golf was not going to result from playing. This is his third season working for Titleist on the Korn Ferry Tour.

“I just knew I wasn’t going to make it (as a player),” Fritz said. “I’ve been in golf my entire life, and I wanted to stay in the game.”

The dozens of players on the Korn Ferry Tour want the same thing. They want to stay in the game by playing well enough to advance in it. The crew in the equipment trailer are another resource on that journey.

“They’re very appreciative. They’re just happy to have somebody out there taking care of them,” Smith said.

Travis Lazarczyk — 861-9242

[email protected]

Twitter: @TLazarczykMTM

 

 

 

 

 

 

[ad_2]

Source link

Frank Sumner Named Person Of Interest In 2000 Murder Of Molly Bish – CBS Boston

[ad_1]

WARREN (CBS) – A person of interest has been named in the disappearance and murder of Molly Bish. Bish was 16 when she disappeared from her lifeguard post at Comins Pond in Warren on June 27, 2000. Her remains were found three years later in Palmer.

Francis “Frank” P. Sumner Sr., who died in 2016, is being investigated in the murder after investigators recently received new information.

READ MORE: 77-Year-Old Man Shot During Fight With Dirt Bikers Was Defending Himself, Daughter Says

Molly Bish and person of interest Francis Sumner (Photos from Getty Images and Worcester County District Attorney’s office)

According to the Worcester County District Attorney’s Office, Sumner was born in 1945, and was active in the Central Massachusetts area from 1960 through 2016.

He was known to operate auto repair shops in the Spencer, Leicester and Worcester areas. Sumner lived in Spencer prior to his death.

Heather Bish, Molly’s sister, is hoping the new information may give them the answers they have been searching for.

Francis “Frank” P. Sumner Sr. (Image from Worcester County DA)

“This person, Frank Sumner, had been convicted of an aggravated rape and kidnapping,” Heather Bish said in an interview with WBZ-TV. “He’s a bad guy and he hid amongst us.”

Heather said one of Sumner’s family members gave her his name as a possible suspect three years ago and she gave that information to police.

READ MORE: Rochester, NH Girl Reports Man Tried To Grab Her On Way To School

Investigators are seeking tips from the public about Sumner’s employment, associates, vehicles, travel and any known habits.

Watch: Full Interview With Heather Bish

“These little things that people might know or have information on about this person is important because all of those little pieces are going to lead the investigators to the whole picture of the puzzle,” Heather Bish said. “Once they have that whole picture then we’ll know.”

Sumner was a convicted sex offender and was well known to law enforcement in the area. “He’s got over a 20 page record,” District Attorney Joe Early said. “We had a tip come in that was corroborated and there was further information that came in which led us to declare Frank P. Sumner as a person of interest in this case.”

Heather Bish said her family is relieved and grateful that the investigation is progressing.

“I don’t know that we’ll know exactly what happened to Molly, but if we know the person who did it, that’s good enough for me,” Heather said.

MORE NEWS: Team Beans: Baby’s Cancer Battle Inspires PMC Community, New Fund At Dana Farber

Anyone with information on Sumner or any additional information on the Molly Bish case is asked to call the district attorney’s anonymous tip line at 508-453-7575

[ad_2]

Source link

FAA fines more passengers for mask refusal

[ad_1]





FAA fines more passengers for mask refusal






















Advertiser Disclosure



Many of the credit card offers that appear on the website are from credit card companies from which ThePointsGuy.com receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site (including, for example, the order in which they appear). This site does not include all credit card companies or all available credit card offers. Please view our advertising policy page for more information.

Editorial Note: Opinions expressed here are the author’s alone, not those of any bank, credit card issuer, airlines or hotel chain, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities.

[ad_2]

Source link

Where to Eat on Your Next Road Trip Down to the New Jersey Shore

[ad_1]

While it’s only a two hour drive down NJ-109 to get “down the shore” (about 125 miles top to bottom, from Sandy Hook to Cape May), once you get close to the ocean and the salt air begins to stream in through the car’s windows, you’ll Zen-out and realize: the destination is but a small part of any journey. If you do a Jersey Shore road trip right, you can take your time, gloriously eating and drinking your way onward for days seeing sights, experiencing local communities, and living your best life.

What we’ve put together is less an itinerary than a map of unique food destinations spanning fine-dining to greasy spoon. Burgers, seafood, ice cream, curry—there’s a little something for everyone, but one thing is certain: each and every place you’ll find below is well worth pulling off the road and taking time out to experience. We start up north and end down south, but this is by no means a prescription—once you’re on the road, you’re in charge, so what’re you waiting for? Here are our essential beach eats for your next road trip down the New Jersey shore.

[ad_2]

Source link

Iceland Has Reopened to Travelers—Here’s Everything You Need to Know

[ad_1]

Iceland is now open to vaccinated travelers, including Americans, with no quarantine.

share this article

flipboard

Good news for fans of long walks on otherworldly landscapes: As of April 6, 2021, all travelers (regardless of origin) who can show proof of a full COVID-19 vaccination or prior COVID-19 infection now have permission to enter Iceland. But before you start plotting your trip to see the still-erupting Fagradalsfjall volcano, there are some things to know.

Before you book your ticket . . .

Make sure you can show proof of one of two things: a full COVID-19 vaccination—be it Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, AstraZeneca, or Johnson & Johnson (Janssen)—via one of the official accepted forms, or an accepted document that shows prior COVID-19 infection (for example, a positive PCR-test that’s older than 14 days). Note that for proof of prior infection, you need documented laboratory results—clinical diagnoses and rapid diagnostic tests (antigen or antibody tests) are not accepted.

All visitors to Iceland, including children, need to preregister on this website before entering the country.

A COVID-19 PCR test is not required to board your flight to Iceland—as long as you’re vaccinated or can prove previous infection. Just don’t expect to have the plane to yourself on the way over. Between the excitement of Iceland’s volcano tourism, its reopening to vaccinated travelers, and the country’s perennial appeal, AFAR’s trusted travel advisors are reporting a flood of interest and bookings.

What are the COVID counts and vaccine rates in Iceland?

Iceland has been lauded as one of the more successful countries at containing spring 2020’s COVID-19 infections. After the county managed to contain a larger wave of infections in fall 2020, an uptick in the British variant there led to a tightening of restrictions in March 2021. Those have since been relaxed, per recommendations by the chief epidemiologist.

Iceland has approved a COVID-19 vaccination for use and is currently providing free, nonmandatory vaccinations to citizens. As of 2019, 356,991 people live in Iceland; according to official Iceland vaccination statistics updated in early May, more than 36,000 residents have been fully vaccinated, and more than 100,000 have received at least one dose.

As of April 26, 2021, the U.S. State Department lists Iceland as a Level 3 Travel Health Notice (Reconsider Travel) “due to COVID-19 related restrictions,” indicating a “high level of COVID-19 in country.” The country has reported 29 coronavirus-related deaths since February 2020. The CDC warns: If you must travel to Iceland, get fully vaccinated before travel. All travelers should wear a mask, stay six feet from others, avoid crowds, and wash their hands. By comparison, the U.S. State Department currently lists Mexico and the United Kingdom as Level 4 (Do Not Travel) while Australia, Japan, and French Polynesia are Level 3.

What kind of mitigation rules are in place?

Being fully vaccinated doesn’t ensure you can’t spread variants of the virus, so heeding the country’s social distancing and masking rules remains paramount.

Article continues below advertisement

Social-distancing rules are still in effect in Iceland and will be through at least May 5, when they’ll be updated on the country’s official COVID-19 page. You must keep six feet between people who are not “closely linked” to you and wear a mask when social distancing isn’t possible. Face masks that cover the nose and mouth are still required on public transport (all operating as normal) and in taxis, and there are limits to the number of people allowed inside theaters, grocery stores, pharmacies, bars, and so on.

Iceland is extremely dependent on tourism (2.3 million visitors arrived there in 2018, according to the Icelandic Tourist Board). And while the tourism board isn’t running overt campaigns targeting international visitors yet (though the incredibly scenic backdrops on the official Iceland tourism Instagram account are enough to woo us), the sector’s importance is undeniable. If you follow Iceland’s protocols and laws, it’s safe to say you will be welcomed. 

Do I need to quarantine on arrival or departure?

All travelers are required to take one COVID-19 test (free of charge) upon landing at the airport in Iceland. You can head to your accommodations after but must stay there while you wait to get the result back via email or SMS, usually within 6 to 24 hours. After that comes back negative, you are free to explore the country. (There is no need to quarantine or to take another PCR test five or six days later.)

What are the requirements for returning to the United States?

Negative COVID-19 tests are required to enter the United States from a foreign country, including Iceland. This applies to everyone, including all U.S. citizens and fully vaccinated travelers. The test must be taken with three days of your return to the U.S. and can be booked up to a week before your departure date. (A list of COVID-19 test facilities around the country can be found here. Note that some but not all require advance appointments.)

Expect to pay 7,000 ISK (about US$56) and results can take 12 hours to get back, so don’t wait until the day before your flight to get tested. There’s no need to quarantine in Iceland while you wait for your test results. Upon arrival in the U.S. with your negative COVID-19 test result, there’s also no need to quarantine.

What about old-school things like “needing a visa”–does that apply here?

Americans don’t need a visa to visit Iceland and can stay for up to 90 days for tourist or business purposes. A full list of nationalities that require visas to travel to Iceland can be found here.

How much is actually open (museums, bars, restaurants)?

From museums to outdoor tours, expect to find most things open and operating across Iceland, albeit under new COVID-19 norms, with reservations often required and reduced hours and capacity possible.

Restaurants are open but those that serve alcohol have a 9 p.m. curfew and allow a maximum of 30 guests. Swimming pools and hot springs, including the famous Blue Lagoon attraction, are open but operating at limited capacity.

To be safe, call ahead of time to make sure whatever you’re planning to do is available. (Most Icelanders speak excellent English, but you can always request your hotel call for you.)

What airlines have flights to Iceland right now?

Delta’s daily service from JFK started back up on May 1. Delta will resume daily flights from Boston to Reykjavík–Keflavik on May 20 and from Minneapolis/St. Paul on May 27.

United begins daily service from Chicago to Reykjavík July 1 to run through October 3. United’s daily flights from Newark to Reykjavík resume June 3 through October 29.

Article continues below advertisement

Icelandair is currently only guaranteeing flights to Reykjavík out of Boston, with more flights expected to resume in June. It is possible to book flights out of JFK-New York but they’re sporadic.

A recent search on Google Flights for round trips from Boston and New York were about $350 and about $800 from Los Angeles and San Francisco.

Any suggestions on places to stay or tour operators? 


Hidden Iceland

AFAR’s digital content director Laura Dannen Redman will be flying via Icelandair out of JFK in May and traveling with Hidden Iceland, a bespoke travel company that specializes in small group and private tours with an emphasis on active travel. “I’ve been wanting to take a trip with Hidden Iceland for years—particularly a glacier hike—so I’ve signed up for a two-day Jökulsárlón Glacier Lagoon tour and hike in the UNESCO protected Vatnajökull National Park. It’s in the southeast of the country, but we’re making time to come back to the southwest to try to spot the lava flow at Fagradalsfjall. Iceland is made for a socially distanced trip—I’ll report back!”

G Adventures

From now until June 30, small tour operator G Adventures is marking down some of its most popular itineraries—including several in Iceland—for trips departing between May 1–October 31, 2021. You can save up to 15 percent on six Iceland itineraries with this adventure travel company founded in 1990 by Bruce Poon Tip, an AFAR 2018 Travel Vanguard winner. 

Our pick is for the six-day Trekking Eastern Iceland tour, which is marked down to $1,529 per person (from $1,799) for its June 6 departure. During the guided trek, you’ll get to hike across the lava fields of Leirhnjúkur, along the black-sand beaches of Brúnavík inlet, and more. 

All 2021 G Adventure bookings made now through June 30 can be canceled and rebooked up to 30 days prior to departure date to allow travelers a little more peace of mind in case they have to reschedule.

Classic Journeys

You can’t go wrong with a Classic Journeys guide—locals who are handpicked by the company founders based on their knowledge, skill, and ability to make you feel welcome, wherever you are. In Iceland, you may be led by a descendent of 9th-century Vikings. Their Iceland Culture + Walking itinerary is a great bet: “Guided by dyed-in-the-wool Icelanders, you’ll enjoy the captivating chaos of Iceland’s nature, interwoven with fascinating Norse mythology. Walk some of the most cinematic paths on the planet—over ancient glaciers, vivid moss fields and black-sand beaches—to Viking ruins, waterfalls, and fishing villages for lunch with local families.”

Hotels

Hotel Ranga, about 60 miles south of Reykjavík on the island’s south coast, where the suites are themed after the seven continents, has an onsite observatory for stargazing and offers tours through Southcoast Adventure to ice caves, volcanoes, and glaciers as well as horseback adventures.

The Retreat at Blue Lagoon is an AFAR favorite spa hotel that gives you private access to the famed lagoon, while the minimalist-chic Silica Hotel gives you easy access to the Blue Lagoon and Silica Lagoon.

Rental cars

Holdur, the largest rental car company in Iceland, has rental locations across the island and minivans, cargo vans, campers, and motor homes in its fleet.

With additional reporting by Laura Dannen Redman and Lyndsey Matthews.

>>Next: How to Have Your Dream Vacation in Iceland

Products we write about are independently vetted and recommended by our editors. AFAR may earn a commission if you buy through our links, which helps support our independent publication.



[ad_2]

Source link

Tripadvisor reveals its 25 most popular U.S. travel destinations for 2021: See the full list

[ad_1]

If you’re daydreaming about finally taking a safe vacation this spring or summer, it can’t hurt to start scouting some of the possible destinations.

Popular online travel company Tripadvisor has released its top 25 list of the most popular U.S. travel destinations for the new year.

Tripadvisor disclosed in a recent statement that 50% of respondents for its latest survey said they’re planning a trip for this spring. The CDC does recommend avoiding air travel when unnecessary, and many of these destinations may be a bit too far. However, there’s always the option to rent an RV for some locations.

Here are Tripadvisor’s 25 most popular U.S. travel destinations for 2021:

  1. New York, N.Y.
  2. Maui, Hawaii
  3. Las Vegas, Nev.
  4. New Orleans, La.
  5. Key West, Fla:
  6. Oahu, Hawaii
  7. Island of Hawaii, Hawaii
  8. San Diego, Calif.
  9. Savannah, Ga.
  10. Kauai, Hawaii
  11. Nashville, Tenn.
  12. Sedona, Ariz.
  13. Charleston, S.C.
  14. Orlando, Fla.
  15. Chicago, Ill.
  16. Branson, Mo.
  17. Asheville, N.C.
  18. Miami Beach, Fla.
  19. Washington, D.C.
  20. Austin, Texas
  21. San Francisco, Calif.
  22. Seattle, Wash.
  23. Los Angeles, Calif.
  24. Denver, Colo.
  25. Boston, Mass.

See the rest of Tripadvisor’s travel awards for 2021 here.

RELATED STORIES ABOUT RETAIL AND SHOPPING:

Try these 3 websites to book a vacation if Airbnb is too tough

Amazon’s spring outdoor sale is live: Here are 17 of the top picks

What is a Solo Stove? Is it a portable fire pit? Here’s everything you need to know

Please subscribe now and support the local journalism YOU rely on and trust.

Nicolette Accardi can be reached at naccardi@njadvancemedia.com. Follow her on Twitter: @N_Accardi. Find NJ.com on Facebook. Have a tip? Tell us. nj.com/tips



[ad_2]

Source link

Caribbean is hot tip for holidays thanks to high Covid vaccine rates | News

[ad_1]

Holidays to the Caribbean could be possible in six weeks as Boris Johnson prepares to open up travel to countries with the best vaccination rates.

On Monday the prime minister will set out a framework for easing the ban on non-essential travel which was introduced to prevent mutant strains of the virus coming here.

Americans who are fully vaccinated can travel abroad “at low risk to themselves” without the need to quarantine when they return home.

Whitehall sources said that Johnson would not commit to the immediate reopening of travel to the most popular holiday destinations such as France and Spain because of concerns about a third wave of the virus in Europe. It is feared that most countries could be out of bounds until

[ad_2]

Source link

Gwen A. Benn-Schmitt – Earlville – Mix 94.7 KMCH

[ad_1]


Heaven gained an angel when Gwen A. Benn-Schmitt, 70, returned to the Lord on Wednesday, March 24, 2021, at MercyOne Medical Center in Dubuque.

Visitation will be held from 2 – 8 pm Sunday, March 28, 2021, at Kramer Funeral Home in Dyersville.  Masks will be required and social distancing should be observed.

Visitation will continue Monday from 9 – 10 am at the funeral home prior to Mass.  A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 10:30 am Monday, March 29, 2021 at St. Francis Xavier Basilica in Dyersville with burial in the church cemetery.  Rev. Dennis Quint will officiate. The services will also be streamed live on YouTube at https://youtu.be/_2PJREvgpeM.

Gwen was born June 24, 1950, in Manchester the oldest child of Irvin and Marlys (Cordray) Noethe.  She grew up in Dyersville and graduated from Beckman High School in 1968, and attended Capri Cosmetology School in Dubuque.  She married Vernon Benn on June 13, 1970, in Dyersville, Iowa.  Together they built a home and had three children before his passing on April 19, 1985.

For many years Gwen worked at LeRoy’s Pizza Restaurant.  In 2004, she began working at Clarke University as the head night cook.

On July 25, 2008, she married James Schmitt.  Together they loved to travel the world.

Gwen was passionate about her family, cooking, music, gardening, traveling and enjoying her back yard.

Gwen is survived by her husband, Jim, children: Brenda (Tony) Kiefer of Taopi, MN, Russell Benn and Brian (Danielle) Benn both of Dyersville; three step-children: Jason (Ragen) Jacobs, Jeff (Beth) Schmitt and Amy (Terry) Recker; grandchildren: Taylor and Bailey Benn, Erin, Jeremy, Andrea and Amber Kiefer, Carter and Courtney Benn, and 11 step-grandchildren and two step-great grandchildren; siblings: Brian (Peggy) Noethe, Carol (friend Ron) Ludovissy, Wayne Noethe, Alice Noethe, Lee (Becky) Noethe; in-laws:, Louis (Ruth) Benn, George (Linda) Benn, Karen (Dennis) Steffensmeier and Margie Benn, and many nieces and nephews.

She is preceded in death by her parents, her first husband, Vernon, a brother, Ken Noethe, in-laws: Danny Benn, Loras Benn, Charles Benn, Tom Benn, Herb Benn, James Benn, Rosemary Harrington, Ruth Nurre, Frances Davidshofer and Steve Ludovissy.

Information available at www.kramerfuneral.com.  Cards may be sent to the family in care of Kramer Funeral Home, 750 – 12th Ave SW, Dyersville, Iowa  52040.

[ad_2]

Source link