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Hi-tech
cart lets stroke survivor continue golfing
By
BILL BRYANT, Special to the Daily News Wednesday, May 24, 2006
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Photo
by David Ahntholz / Daily News
Bill Hefferon warms up before hitting on the driving range at
Pelican Marsh Golf Club Friday morning. Hefferon helped develop
the SoloRider golf cart, which has allowed him to continue to
play golf after having a stroke in January 1999. With the aid
of the cart to move around the course, Hefferon continues to
play golf three to four times a week. |
Bill
Hefferon had just finished his latest round of golf, a disappointing
103, 31 shots over par.
“I
think my ego got the better of me a few times today,” he said. “I
tried to go for a few shots I shouldn’t have.”
But
the 69-year-old Naples resident wasn’t complaining. After a stroke
seven years ago threatened to deprive him of the game he loved,
Hefferon is just glad to be back on the golf course.
For
that, he has his own determination and a specially designed golf
cart to thank.
“I
tell everybody that this golf cart changed my life,” Hefferon said.
The
golf cart that Hefferon uses to get around the Pelican Marsh Golf
Club, and others in the Naples area, is specially designed to accommodate
players with physical disabilities and seniors who have limited
mobility. The single-passenger cart was engineered to make it safe
to go on tees and greens without damaging the turf, reducing the
amount of walking required of players. An electronic seat lifts
and turns to put players in position to play their shots without
leaving the cart.
An
avid player while he was running an insurance agency in Binghamton,
N.Y., Hefferon moved to Naples in 1997 intent on playing more golf
and lowering his 17 handicap. The plan was working until Jan. 23,
1999, when a cerebral hemorrhage left him paralyzed on his left
side. At the same moment, he also lost a reason to live.
“After
the stroke, about all he did was sit in his recliner and watch Fox
News,” said Marilyn Hefferon, his wife of 46 years. “It was very
sad to see his whole demeanor just go like that.”
It
was about a year later when Hefferon heard about the new electric
golf cart from a company named SoloRider. He flew to the
manufacturing facility in Centennial, Colo., and after consulting
on the design of the hydraulic seat, bought one of the carts for
himself. He spent the next year relearning how to play the game,
often working by himself after everyone else had left the course.
He would drive the cart near his ball, grip his custom-made clubs
in his right hand and swing with his right arm. “I started at the
150-yard marker, and when I thought I could play from there, I’d
move back a few yards,” he recalls.
“He
was determined, that’s for sure,” said Rick Rainville, head golf
professional at Pelican Marsh. “Before you knew it, he was back
playing 18 holes.”
The
transformation in her husband’s outlook was dramatic, Marilyn Hefferon
said.
“It
was a miracle,” she said. “He
couldn’t wait to get to the golf course.”
Hefferon
now plays three or four times a week at Pelican Marsh, where he
says he’s the fastest player. He’d like to play more, especially
when he travels to visit family and friends, but most courses still
don’t offer the special golf carts that Hefferon said makes playing
the game safe and enjoyable for players with physical disabilities.
Two
years ago, the Department of Justice announced it was considering
requiring golf courses to make at least one, and possibly two, of
the specialized carts available to comply with the Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1991. But the DOJ has been slow to act.
“I
can’t tell you how frustrating it is,” Hefferon said. “I can’t play
golf unless I have this cart, and putting my cart on a trailer and
dragging it all around just isn’t practical most of the time. If
courses would just realize that they could be keeping more members
and increasing their rounds if they had one or two of these carts,
they’d be all over them like a cheap suit.”
Rainville
says: “You see people all the time who have given up the game because
playing is physically exhausting or painful for them. There’s no
question in my mind that a cart like this would allow many more
people to enjoy the game a lot longer.”
Meanwhile,
Hefferon has become an ambassador for the carts and for players
who want to stay in the game, but who need a little help getting
around the course.
“Without
golf, my wife wouldn’t want to leave me alone, and I would feel
guilty,” he said. “Now, we lead independent lives, and I just can’t
tell you how important independence is to someone with a disability.”
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