After playing The Old twice on Thursday, I pretty much mentally was feeling that the golfing trip was over. What about Carnoustie? Well, I wasn't really looking forward to Carnoustie. I don't mind playing a hard course, but I was picturing, well, what we saw when The Open was played there. I thought I'd lose maybe a dozen balls, especially being a little tired after 16 rounds of golf in 9 days. Also, it is the only course we played that was not really a links course. So, I figured I'd go there, get beat up, and prepare for home. I was very pleasantly surprised! Carnoustie is a very enjoyable, playable course! I had a spot of trouble on the first hole - hit my tee shot into a burn, but it bounced out. I chunked something into the left rough. Hacked it forward. Then hit a beautiful half-9 iron run-up to a foot. Made bogie. I had a great caddie - Ian. He was not only a good caddie, but the caddies all had a great time needling each other. Mark's caddie, however, was miserable at reading putts. Mark trusted him on the first green, and every single putt of the 4 he made broke the exact opposite direction that the caddie told him! The caddies at Carnoustie are all short and stocky, we decided because of the constant wind, they had to be shaped that way. They reminded me of the Oompa-Loompas from the chocolate factory movie. The second hole I still didn't have a swing, but on the 3rd hole Ian handed me my 4-wood and told me to aim at the bunkers - I couldn't get there, plus the wind would carry them right. I, however, found my swing and hit it past the bunkers, though I was safe in the middle of the fairway because the wind did push it to the right. Ian said "I didna know ye had it inya!" So now after getting warmed up, I started to hit the ball really well. Probably my best driving day of the trip. It was still quite windy, and on one hole, I had what would normally be an easy 8-iron. 7-iron?, I asked Ian. He said, sure, here's a 7-iron, just ignore the fact that it says 6 on it. Hit it pin-high. I would have had a good round and won all the skins if somebody hadn't substituted a wet lasagna noodle for my putter. I didn't get the speed right all day - and the greens were fantastic. But I was 10 feet short most of the time on my lag putts... with the occasional 10 feet past. I had probably 10 three-putts and still shot a 90. But this was good-bye to golf in Scotland, and we headed back to get packed up for the return trip. Some of us spent the afternoon walking around the town of St. Andrews, then packed up, drank a few final pints, and it was over. It was good to be going home, but sad to be leaving the great golf courses of Scotland. Thus end the Chronicles of Thor's Scottish Golf Trip. I hope you enjoyed them, or at least they were an adequate sleep aid. My golfing-heart is still in Dornoch, smelling the sea and watching the gorse and Scottish people playing The Gemme so differently that it seems they are on another planet. I can hardly wait for my sons to grow up so they can take me there again! Lots of pics to come soon, they will be here: http://rsgohio.netfirms.com/scotlandpics/nfpicturepro And all my writeups, other scotland stuff here: http://rsgohio.com/scotland The RSG-USG match, including bios is here: http://rsgohio.com/rsgusg Lang mae yer lum reek! --Thor