People who live next to a city golf course can expect a wayward ball to wind up in their yard every once in a while. But for the households across the street from the fourth hole of south Minneapolis’ Hiawatha Golf Course, golf season is synonymous with an unrelenting barrage of balls that pockmark their siding and shatter their windows.

“Everybody in our general area has their little basket of golf balls,” said neighbor Tyler Page, whose windshield was smashed by a golf ball earlier this summer.

He believes the problem lies with the course’s layout, which challenges golfers to tee off parallel to the short fence separating the course from the neighborhood.

“Everyone in our family has almost been hit by an errant ball multiple times, and we frequently witness pedestrians and vehicles on 43rd ducking or dodging to avoid balls,” Page wrote to the board of park commissioners in June. “We cannot be anywhere outside our home without constantly needing to look over our shoulders for golf balls.”

Neighbor Jean Cameron said her husband was struck by a golf ball while eating lunch outside, and about a year ago, a ball crashed through the window of their breakfast nook, spraying broken glass everywhere.

Another nearby resident, Susan Rose, grew up across the street from a golf course in Wisconsin and never had golf balls fly off course as often as they do on this side of Hiawatha, she said. Her daughter was once hit while biking down 43rd Avenue.

“It’s a little crazy,” said neighbor Danica King, who hands off her buckets of errant balls to her golfer brother. “We have all known, within just the past two years, people who have had their car windshields, like, shattered at some point.”

Write A Comment