He compares caddying skills such as yardages and reading greens to the land navigation skills he learned in the army stationed in Iraq. But Tristen Lane will tell you, it is golf that has taught him the kind of skills that has helped him come to terms with the PTSD he had acquired during his tour of duty there.
“I have come to see the benefits of golf as well as being a caddie as an inspiration to our youth as well as to my fellow veterans. Children can benefit from the etiquette as a tool of learning as well as for veterans to re-learn life and social skills,” says Lane.
It was a sense of duty that led Lane to join the army in the wake of 9/11. And it was that same sense of duty that led Lane to surf the net following a failed business in hopes of discovering renewed purpose.
“God has put me on this earth for something,” says Lane. “Being a persistent individual I have got it in my mind that I can do and succeed in anything that I do. It is survival, and this is a trait that I picked up from being in war.”
When he founded PCA Worldwide, he thought: “A golf caddie? Sounds interesting.” He contacted the PCA and after that conversation, Lane was convinced he had discovered “the rest of my journey in life.”
Lane signed on to the PCA’s apprentice and certification programs, which involved a detailed course of study and testing in all aspects of caddying and forecaddying, from the moment a caddie is introduced to his or her client, through positioning on the course, play and providing advice. The instruction includes application of medical emergency procedures including CPR and application of an AED. Lane then got the first PCA licensing rights to operate a PCA-Idaho caddie service under the PCA brand for the entire state of Idaho.
At a golf expo in Boise earlier this spring, Lane met representatives from Boise’s Shadow Valley Golf Club. The club was intrigued by Lane’s proposal for a caddie program, but more by Lane’s irrepressible enthusiasm for the idea.
“We’re always looking for ways to enhance our operation and offer golfers more,” says Shadow Valley’s head golf professional T.J. Gomez. “We thought Lane’s plan to involve returning veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan was a fantastic idea.”
So far this spring and summer, Lane has “looped” about 80 rounds at Shadow Valley. While still in its infancy, Lane expects to train ten full-time caddies and a similar number of forecaddies for Shadow Valley, beginning in 2010. It is a bit of a gamble, according to Gomez.
“Given the moderate fee structure in the area, paying a gratuity for a caddie might be a tough sell,” says Gomez. “A forecaddie program, where one caddie would be assigned to a foursome in carts might prove more affordable for golfers and profitable for caddies.”
Gomez does believe that a forecaddie can positively impact pace of play, and believes that’s where the market might lie for caddying in Idaho. Market or not, Lane says he’s in it for the long haul. He’s talked with the Veterans Administration about caddying as a way of coping with PTSD.
“Caddying has taught me patience, how to slow down. I’m happy here. I like being outdoors.”
Lane’s caddying skills may have already begun to show prominently. At home with his four-year old son putting on a makeshift green in home, his son lined up a putt, looked at his father and commanded, “tend the pin, daddy.”
Dennis Cone and Reid Champagne have been GWAA ( Golf Writers Assoc ) members for over 10 years
Dennis Cone founded PCA Worldwide Foundation in 1992. Since then the organization has developed the Caddie Hall of Fame and PCA Association has help train and certify over 10,800 caddie/members worldwide. Today, the PCA Foundation continues as an institution “where all caddies based on experience, performance and achievement would be able to be recognized by their peers, golfers, the golfing community and the world.”