Otago Daily Times

Duck was out, ball went in, eggs fine — no yolk

- KAYLA HODGE kayla.hodge@odt.co.nz

WAS it an albatross, an eagle or perhaps a birdie?

No, it was just a duck.

After teeing off for his first shot of the day on Sunday, Oamaru lawyer Michael de Buyzer watched his golf ball take an unfortunat­e turn.

It had ended up among trees and he set off in search of where it had landed.

Despite looking high and low through the foliage at the

Lower Waitaki Golf Club course for the ball, it was to no avail — until he spotted a lone duck.

The mother duck appeared to be protecting something. On a whim, Mr de Buyzer gently moved the bird and struck the jackpot.

There, camouflage­d between 10 large unharmed duck eggs, sat his elusive golf ball.

‘‘It’s weird, and it’s hard to understand how it got there,’’ he said.

‘‘It was the closest I got to a birdie all day.’’

He believed the duck flew away from its nest for a moment, allowing the ball to ‘‘trickle in’’.

The duck was relatively placid about the situation, and appeared to be ‘‘just as surprised as I was’’.

Fellow golfers at the Whitestone Cheese Classic tournament agreed Mr de Buyzer could remove his ball from the nest, and play his shot from a short distance away, without forfeiting a penalty.

However, the incident ‘‘disoriente­d’’ his game for the rest of the day, he said.

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Hole in one . . . Michael de Buyzer (inset) landed his ball in a duck’s nest, among 10 eggs, at the Lower Waitaki Golf Club on Sunday.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Hole in one . . . Michael de Buyzer (inset) landed his ball in a duck’s nest, among 10 eggs, at the Lower Waitaki Golf Club on Sunday.

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