
The whole TeE sheet for the 2025 season in Landmand was sold in less than an hour.
Bill Hornstein
You can say that Homer, Neb, is a glowing city and-you-Miss, besides not even a city. It is a village with a population of about 500 people, inserted into the northeastern corner of the state.
Out of sight, out of mind.
And yet, player legions can locate it on a map.
like TapeOre., NekoosaWISC., And other distant locals that have spread to the main destinations in the game, Homer is the place of a “Dream Field” project, brought to life by a long golf jungle possessing land and the miraculous conviction that if he built it.
The course is the land of the earth. If it’s known to you, it may be because you played it or because you saw it on Instagram, where it has become a boyfriend of the digital era.
She also had real bright cameras.
The result of this most official shoot is a documentary on the origin of the course, which will premiere on Golf Channel on Monday.
“Thing everything else, the small-history of Landmand Golf Club” is the work of Danny Christianen, a Charlotte-based director who traces the transformation of a agricultural land swath into a strong and bold appearance.
Less one story about the Bronze Course Construction Construction links than the people behind the project, the film focuses on Will Andersen, the son of a third -generation farmer who fell in love with golf as he shared the balls in a football field with his grandfather and later played in the first Golf of the Local School.
A short career in the Golf-Club business followed, taking Andersen to Agoikago for a job on a prestigious private course. But Homer was called with his promise to the family, the connection with the land and the quiet rhythms of the Little City life. Return home, still hit by golf but inclined to have another foundation in the game, Andersen began to consider a Quixotic plan to turn some of the family agricultural land into a course.
The film covers how it happened, including such key plot points, after email Andersen sent out of blue to Rob Collins, co-projector, with tad King, of Sweetenedin Tennessee, nine-hole well known by nine nine; Collins and King were thrown into the chance to work in Landmand.
Homer’s civic motto is “small but alive”. The title of the film is a show in that phrase, but also a gentle descriptor of a stunning ladder appearance, with stretched greens, auspicious street, widespread bunkers and sandy waste-a large place suitable for this site and its big sky background.
The impact, too, has been great. As the film notes in its closing loans, on New Year’s Eve of 2024, Landmand issued the availability of its sheet for 2025. The whole season was sold in less than an hour.