A blind golfer has become a member of an elite group after scoring a hole in one in Fife.
Jim Gales, 46, hit the ace on the first hole at Wellsgreen, near Windygates, as he practised for the Scottish Pan-Disability Open being played this week at Scotscraig Golf Club, Tayport.
Mr Gales, who is chairman of the Scottish Disability Golf Partnership and was awarded the MBE for his services to blind golf, lost his sight to Retinitis Pigmentosa in 1988. He took up golf in 1995 after he moved to Springfield, near Cupar in Fife.
His hole-in-one was on a 65-yard par three and was his first ever in 15 years of trying.
Mr Gales said: "It was a wonderful feeling when my sighted guide told me it went in. I have some light perception, but cannot distinguish any shapes or shadows and I cannot see anything on the golf course.
"I rely on my sighted guide, Paul Shepherd, to paint a picture of the hole, the yardage and any potential hazards in the way.
"We'd just picked up our clubs, and arrived at the first tee when I got my hole in one. At 65 yards it's not the furthest but the green is like an upturned saucer sloping away from the pin on all sides, and very tricky.
"I took out a pitching wedge and gave the ball a whack. Paul told me I'd hit it fairly straight, that it landed five or so yards short of the green, ran up on to the green and then disappeared. Then he said 'it's gone in' and everyone fell about laughing.
"There were quite a few people there so, as is the tradition, I had a few drinks to buy in the clubhouse."
He added: "I've been playing golf for years and only once before come close to scoring a hole in one, when my ball hit the rim of the hole and bounced out in a competition in Canada. To finally manage one was fantastic.
"You don't target getting a hole in one because they are as rare as hens' teeth even for sighted players. Now, of course, I'd like another one."
Mr Gales has travelled around the world playing at various tournaments.
He said: "Golf has given me wonderful opportunities to travel, and compete in tournaments in Japan, Australia, the USA and Canada. "The most difficult thing in golf, for me, is chipping in from 20 or 30 yards.
"I practice putting at home, but my wife Janet isn't particularly happy with the paintwork being chipped off the skirting boards thanks to my golf balls hitting them all the time."
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