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March 23 2009 Page 4 Features, Weather, Sports, Exchange

 

Winners Men's Golf


Renovation, new attitude has revived Flamingos Golf near Puerto Vallarta, Mexico

By Mike Bailey,
Senior Writer

After a recent renovation, Flamingos Golf, the first golf course in the Puerto Vallarta area, is better than ever.

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BUCERIAS, Nayarit, Mexico - Sometimes you're just plain pleasantly surprised.

Which was the case when I played the Flamingos Golf, the first golf course in the Puerto Vallarta area, way back in 1978.

There were a few lean times for this public access golf club. According to locals and some who have been coming here for many winters, course conditions had deteriorated as newer facilities such as the Jack Nicklaus course at Vista Vallarta Club de Golf and Tom Weiskopf at Vista Vallarta, El Tigre Golf Course at Paradise Village Beach Resort & Spa, and Punta Mita Golf Club came on the scene. Flamingos had become less relevant.

But the Flamingos owners, who bought the club in 2000, spent $3 million on a recent renovation - which includes a new clubhouse, golf shop, restaurant and driving range - that has brought the club back to its former glory and then some. Director of Golf Claudia Staines has made sure maintenance and course conditions are a top priority, and it shows.

The course meanders up and down hills with elevated tees and greens, plenty of wildlife and lots of colorful flora, which makes it different from its competition. Contrary to reports I had heard, the golf course was in terrific shape when I played it, and it was a nice contrast to the other great golf venues in the area.

Flamingos Golf: A Percy Clifford gem

Playing 6,892 yards with a par of 72, Flamingos was designed by Percy Clifford, an English architect who is known for his good work in Mexico, including the Golf Club of Mexico and the Club de Golf Chapultepec in Mexico City.

Flamingos Golf Club - Hole 7Clifford preserved the natural tropical greenery, which includes more than 1,800 palm trees, as he wound the holes around a series of natural lagoons and estuaries that are home to deer, rabbits, turtles, 100 species of birds and, of course, crocodiles.

"I advise anyone who hits a ball into the water to leave it there," Staines said with a laugh.

Flamingos is one of the few golf courses in which the front nine is considerably harder than the back the nine. At first glance, you're thinking that a course that's less than 6,900 yards can't play that long. Think again.

The front nine, which is a par 37, is nearly 3,600 yards long from the back tee. Because of some of the elevation changes and soft, plush Bermuda fairways, drives generally don't roll out, leaving some long approach shots into holes like the 611-yard, par-5 third and 426-yard, par-4 fourth. There's also a 202-yard par 3, the sixth, on the front nine.

Flamingos Golf Club - Hole 12The key to scoring on this course is surviving the front nine. Because while the back nine is no pushover, it is easier - and more fun.

There's the 402-yard, par-4 11th, the course's No. 2 handicap hole. It's a dogleg left that tempts players hitting driver to cut the corner over the jungle. That's followed by the par-4 12th, a medium-length, sharp, dogleg-left par 4 in which you have to avoid the water that comes into play off the tee left and possibly on the approach.

The 15th is a terrific risk-reward par 5 at 540 yards with water in play on the second and third shot. It's followed by a picturesque par 3 that plays 158 yards over water. The 17th is a nice, short, uphill par 4 and a birdie opportunity. The 18th, with water off the tee right, can also be birdied if you find the right part of this green that slopes back to front.

Range, lessons and caddies at Flamingos Golf

Flamingos Golf Club - Practice GreenThere's a large practice green behind the newly renovated clubhouse and an ample driving range to warm up before your round.

Lessons are also available from Staines, a member of the U.S. LPGA.

Forecaddies are not only available but also required for groups of four. But unlike the U.S., a group can hire a forecaddie for less than $10 U.S. per player, including tip, and they really do add a lot to the round.

Don't expect them to read your putts, Staines said, but they will get you around the course in good fashion, take care of your clubs and generally encourage you.

Flamingos Golf: The verdict

Priced less than much of the local competition, Flamingos is a good value and a challenging, fun golf experience. Now they just need to figure out how to get the word out to visitors.

"I don't have much of a marketing budget," Staines said. "We're choosing to put that money into the golf course."

Which is always good.

After your round, try the new open Papago restaurant behind the 18th green for drinks or a quick bite to eat. The menu includes burgers, sandwiches and salads as well as the catch of the day, which comes straight from the nearby Pacific Ocean.

March 12, 2009

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SPORTS

Cuba thumps Mexico to close Round 1

Unbeaten squad to face Japan Sunday in rematch of '06 final…click here for more information

Aoh wins WBC featherweight championship

Against defending champion Oscar Larios of Mexico

Japan's Takahiro Aoh overwhelmed defending champion Oscar Larios of Mexico for a unanimous points victory to become the new World Boxing Council (WBC) featherweight champion on Thursday…click here for more information

Mexico thrash Australia to advance in WBC

Karim Garcia homered twice on Wednesday when Mexico crushed Australia 16-1 to secure a spot in the second round of the World Baseball Classic. …To Continue Article Click Here

Mexico’s pressure sinks Whitesboro

It was all there for the Whitesboro girls basketball team …To Continue Article Click Here

Puerto Rico, Cruz Azul reach Champions semis

By Ridge Mahoney, Special to SI.com, Soccer America

The only MLS influence in the CONCACAF Read more here

 Mexico has with 14 hits in 7-3 win over Rockies

Mexico is sending a message to the rest of the World Baseball Classic teams: Don't take our squad lightly. Read more here

 

The Wolf Pack

 

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WEATHER

Puerto Vallarta

 

SAN Pancho Weather  www.sanpanchoweather.com

 

Weather in Mexico

Acapulco

Loreto

Puerto Vallarta

Aguascalientes

Los Mochis

Queretaro Airport

Cancun

Manzanillo

San Felipe

Cozumel

Mazatlan

San Jose Del Cabo

Cuernavaca

Merida

San Luis Potosi

Durango

Mexico City

Santa Rosalia

Ensenada

Monterrey

Tampico

Guadalajara

Morelia

Tepic

Guanajuato

Oaxaca

Veracruz

Bahias De Huatulco

Puebla

Zacatecas

Ixtapa Zihuatanejo

Puerto Escondido

 

La Paz

Puerto Penasco

 

 


Currency

EXCHANGE

EXCHANGE

Last Week

 

Mexico's Weak Peso Lures Foreign Investment Despite Downturn
Peter Millard - Dow Jones
go to original


 


 

Mexico City - The sharp fall in Mexico's peso has fueled inflation and eroded consumer confidence in Latin America's second largest economy, but there are two sides to every coin.

A number of companies have accelerated spending this year to take advantage of the cheap local currency, easing the negative impact of the global downturn, according to a government agency dedicated to attracting foreign investment.

"It costs them less to invest in Mexico," said ProMexico Director Bruno Ferrari on Tuesday.

Ferrari acknowledged foreign investment will decline this year amid the credit crisis and economic slump, but said he still expects Mexico to meet its 2009 target of $15 billion, down from $18.6 billion in 2008.

If Mexico meets the 2009 target it will help lessen the blow the global downturn has dealt the country. Mexico's economy is expected to contract 1.9% this year and unemployment is on the rise, largely due to the recession in the U.S. where Mexico sends over 80% of its exports.

Foreign companies in the aerospace, chemical, medical and renewable energy industries are among those spending in Mexico this year.

"They are taking advantage of this [cheap local currency] as much as they can, " Ferrari said during a press conference.

He even said a handful of companies that relocated from Mexico to Asia to cut operating costs are now thinking about returning.

Mexico's peso was trading at MXN15.35 to the U.S. dollar Tuesday, down 35% from peak levels last summer. For a foreign company, this means it gets a third more value out of each dollar it spends in Mexico compared with mid-2008.

Ferrari said Danish toy company Lego Group, Japanese electronics company Kyocera Corp. (KYO), U.S. soft drinks giant PepsiCo Inc. (PEP) and Grupo Aernnova, a Spanish aviation parts company, have recently opened plants in Mexico in spite of the global economic woes.

peter.millard(at)dowjones.com

 

Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki


David Lord - PVNN

 

Criticism is something we can easily avoid, by saying nothing, doing nothing, being nothing.
- Aristotle
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The Navy Times (3/13, Maze) reports Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki "released an unusual open letter to all veterans Friday, saying he is committed to transforming his department into a 21st-century organization in which veterans are central to everything VA does."

Issued after two weeks of controversy swirling around VA for problems both inherited and caused by some preliminary decisions within the Obama administration, the letter is an unusual step. VA officials said that other than annual Veterans Day messages, they are unaware of any other such letter to veterans sent by a VA secretary for at least a decade, and probably longer.

VA spokesman Phil Budahn said it would be wrong to read too much into the message. "It is what it is," Budahn said. "He wanted to send a message to veterans that introduces him and lays out his priorities." Veterans organizations - who so far appear to like Shinseki - seemed pleased.

Joe Davis, public affairs director for Veterans of Foreign Wars, the nation's largest group for combat veterans, said VA "is in the service industry, and its leader is communicating in simple language that his customers are his No. 1 priority and the reason his department exists. Secretary Shinseki is one of us, and we look forward to working with him to ensure that VA fulfills a grateful nation's promise to her veterans," Davis said.

The Times notes that Shinseki "is a disabled veteran - twice wounded in Vietnam - who served a full career in the military, rising to Army chief of staff." In his letter, he says he views his new job as an 'opportunity to give back to those who served with and for me during my 38 years in uniform and those on whose shoulders we all stood as we grew up in the profession of arms.'

Syndicated columnist Tom Philpott, in a piece appearing in the Tacoma News Tribune (3/14) among other outlets, writes:

Obama is drawing high praise from veterans service organizations for proposing a Department of Veterans Affairs budget that would exceed by $1.3 billion what even the veterans groups suggested be spent next year.

No previous president has offered a VA spending plan that surpassed in size the 'Independent Budget' presented to Congress by major veterans groups. Obama seeks to fulfill several promises made to veterans during his presidential campaign, including a big increase in VA healthcare budgets.

But it was a new and unpopular proposal being studied by the administration that created uncomfortable moments for VA Secretary Eric K. Shinseki when he made separate appearances Tuesday before the House and Senate veterans' affairs committees...

Shinseki received a warm welcome when he presented the budget outline to the Senate and House veterans affairs committees. But he also got a string of strong warnings from committee members over a cost-saving proposal that Shinseki conceded is under study.

The administration is considering charging veterans' health insurance plans earned through civilian employment for VA's costs in treating service-connected injuries or ailments. VA already taps 'third party' insurance plans for treatment of nonservice-related conditions.

Collections in fiscal 2008 totaled $2.4 billion. VA expects to collect $2.5 billion this year. The total could jump to $3 billion next year if care of service-connected conditions are included. Shinseki emphasized that this is only 'a consideration' and not yet part of Obama's budget request.


Volunteer work is what I do for the benefit of those that I feel deserve the best in life, the U.S. Veteran. I sometimes get it right and gain a lifetime income for those that have served.

The veterans participation in this process is to fill out claims forms and to keep his or her records and to keep me informed of any or all communications made by the V.A. to them. It is important to remember that all contact is made by the V.A. directly with the veteran.

I can only assist and the veteran should report back to me the claims progress by the V.A. I am pleased to assist veterans and will always do so to the best as a national service officer volunteer. I charge no fee and my time is donated, sometimes the V.A. loses paperwork, it has happened to me, I can do nothing about it, unfortunately.
David Lord has been a National Veterans Service Officer doing veteran's benefits in Mexico for over a decade. David is a combat veteran, wounded by gunshot in Viet Nam 1968 and is a retired Marine. The Veterans Administration has played a critical role in his life, by his having both medical and compensation benefits. He uses his personal experience in the claims process along with having legal and credentialed Accreditation by the Department of Veterans Affairs. His use of Congressional approved Veterans Organizations, to steer veterans and dependants through the maze of regulations and entitlements due them from military service is outstanding. For more information, email him at david.lord(at)yahoo.com.

Click HERE for more Veteran Affairs with David Lord »»»
 

 


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