The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Golfer feeling peachy after finding lost ball

stunned: Woman thought she would never see it again after gull swooped three years ago

- sTewarT alexander

A woman has been reunited with her favourite golf ball – three years after it was stolen by a seagull.

Elizabeth Picton lost the ball on a frustratin­g day of golf and thought she would never see it again.

She chased after the thieving bird when it initially swooped down during a putting competitio­n three years ago.

The pensioner was competing on the Himalayas course at the West Sands in St Andrews when the bird made off with the peach-coloured ball.

Elizabeth said she had never seen another one like her Volvik Crystal number 7 but was left stunned when she spotted it in a charity shop.

She said: “I started to chase after it, brandishin­g my putter and shouting at it.

“Everyone around me on the course was collapsing with laughter at the sight.

“The seagull headed off towards a bunch of spiky reeds at the side of the beach and I am not sure if that was where it maybe dropped it, but when I checked around after the competitio­n was finished I couldn’t see it anywhere.

“It was one of my favourites because it was a lovely peach colour which I expect the seagull thought was something nice to eat.

“I could never play with white balls, so this was my lucky one which I always kept in my putting bag. I had used it for about two years.

Mrs Picton, who only took up putting as a hobby after retiring and moving to St Andrews in 2002, said she was quite upset about the loss of her favourite ball.

But she was given two coloured replacemen­t balls from the clubs she is a member of – the St Rule putting section and the St Andrews Ladies Putting Club – and used them instead.

The retired solicitor said she eventually gave up looking for her lost ball and did not expect to see it again.

Recently, however, she spotted it among a basket of golf balls while walking past a Save the Children charity shop.

She said: “There on the top of the pile was my old golf ball. I couldn’t believe it.

“I rushed into the shop and asked the lady if I could see the golf ball. She must have thought I had gone mad.

“I bought it back right away for 30 pence.

“My husband said how could I be sure it is that one, but I am 99% sure it is the one I had because it is quite distinctiv­e and I’ve not seen one with the same number before.

“People often go around the courses and the area around about looking for stray golf balls and I am sure someone must have picked it up in the long grass where the seagull dropped it.”

 ?? Picture: SWNS. ?? Elizabeth Picton is thrilled to be reunited with her golf ball.
Picture: SWNS. Elizabeth Picton is thrilled to be reunited with her golf ball.

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