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Global Golf Travels

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the golfers journal digital - may, 2022

Check out Greg's newest article about Prairie Dunes!

The Golfers Journal digital article

independent banker - january, 2022

Story by Brianna Boecker

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the golfers' journal podcast - november, 2021

Hear Greg's interview with best-selling author Tom Coyne.

The golfers' journal Podcast

pinestraw magazine - november, 2021

Story by author Lee Pace

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golfweek podcast - october, 2021

Hear Greg's interview with Jim Hansen of Golfweek.

Golfweek Podcast

book press release - september, 2021

Official Book Press Release Story

Daily journal

golf club atlas - July, 2021

Golf Club Atlas Feature Interview with Greg Ohlendorf

For the Feature Interview, click below.

https://golfclubatlas.com/feature-interview-with-greg-ohlendorf/


Ran Morrissett's Introductory Post

Writing about where you have played golf is tricky business. In his just released book, Global Golf Travels, Greg Ohlendorf avoids the trap of doing so in a braggadocios manner that could lose the reader. Rather, the book casts a variety of hooks to lure the reader in, including learning about scores of courses world-wide, highlighting the most unusual/distinctive holes, tips on travel, human interest stories, the art of networking, etc. Additionally, the book’s sweet spot for me is that much of it involves family time, which is how I grew up playing the game. Be it often with his wife, son, and/or nephew, Greg has played in all 50 states and every major golf country and then some.

Greg self-published this 8”x11” hardbound book and it contains 400 pages and 40 color photos. Phil Hensley turned up last weekend (uninvited as usual!) and grabbed Greg’s book off my coffee table, eventually remarking, “If I saw this is in a book store, I would buy it.” That’s the ultimate compliment to the author and the folks that helped along the way, including a lady here in Southern Pines with a professional magazine background that did much of the layout.

Greg is a doer, one of those guys with gumption who makes things happen. Having lost his father at age 36 years, he knows there are no guarantees in life. Worth noting, he didn’t start with a silver spoon in his mouth. His journey started from playing public courses around Chicago and there is an appealing every man’s perspective present in his writing. His trips are of his own making and he hopes that you, the reader, conclude that if he has seen the world’s best, so can you. Plus, how he has experienced certain courses can enhance your own journeys. One example centers around playing in ‘open’ events in the UK. Another is organizing and playing in ‘club matches’. Those are two avenues open to overseas visitors when playing golf in the UK. The point being, it is not just about where you play that helps build memories for a life time.

Apart from this being a tribute to his family, the game and the people he met along the way (including talking trout fishing with Bush 41 at Cape Arundel and an indefatigable 90 year old lady member at MPCC), what you get is a single, cohesive perspective on the courses that we dream of playing. That means you need to care what Greg thinks and his answer to question 4 provides clarity on his perspective. He and I have had numerous lunches locally (he calls Pinehurst home part of the year) and I can attest that he has a keen eye and a great memory for details. Plus, he is shrewd enough to give his wife, Melissa, gobs of (deserved) credit throughout, so we are definitely dealing with a man who knows how the world works.

The story is one of unfettered gratitude to what the game has meant to him. He elects not to use it as a platform to demean courses and he declined to answer questions in this Feature Interview that would disparage courses, noting “Were all the courses great? Certainly not, but only a few didn’t have any redeeming qualities. And beyond that, the people I met and played with more often than not made up for course deficiencies.”

Therein lies the beauty of using golf as the fulcrum for travel – the golf matters (for sure!) but really it is a means to explore and interact with different people and cultures around the world, made all the better if you experience many such moments with a family member.  Global Golf Travels is the story of a life well lived and appeals on a variety of levels.

Greg and his caddie at Nauru Golf Club.

Golfers on Golf - May 29, 2021

Author Greg M. Ohlendorf is interviewed by Rory Spears on Golfers on Golf 

asian tigers - july, 2018

Read about Greg's trip to South Korea, Japan, China, Viet Nam, and Thailand!

Golfweek digital article
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