|
|  You are in: Special Events: The Open: SOL at The Open  |
|
Paying The Open price
Tiger Woods enjoys an expensive snack
BBC Sport Online's Kitrina Douglas discovers the cost of living the Lytham life is rising.
I spent part of the Friday morning sampling the range of culinary delights on offer around Royal Lytham and St Annes. I started with the luxury (and generally healthier) end of the market. If I was feeling flush I could have gone for a hefty roast pork baguette at an equally hefty price of £5. As it is summer, the lighter hummus and red pepper wrap at £3.95 appealed or even the roast vegetable cous-cous for £4.15. But my winner in the "most luxurious sandwich" category was the crayfish and rocket on wheatgrain bread for £3.45.
If your mid-morning appetite is supported by a loan facility with a generous rate of interest you could have pushed the boat out at Lytham. You can even dine on half a lobster for £21 - perhaps not the place for a family meal! Of course you'd have to accompany the lobster with a good bottle of Chablis (£38.50) or, even better, a visit to the Bollinger tent for a bottle of their finest for £43.50 (half bottle only £21.75!). My tastes were more modest. I enjoyed a bottle of mineral water for £1.60 (ouch!) and a bowl of melon at £3.95 (it was a large bowl). Lunch is looking like the decidedly unhealthy, but bank manager friendly, fish and chips option (£4) accompanied by a coffee (£1.25). Or, if things get really desperate a pint of Kronenbourg from the beer tent (£2.60). I then moved on the check out the shopping opportunities at the Open. The exhibition tent is always a favourite among the public, but this year I found it particularly uninspiring. Dour exhibition I love shopping in old markets and the way the tent used to be organised was great - lots of unusual golf memorabilia on offer at a multitude of little stands and stalls. The 2001 tent is now scientifically divided into "exhibition" and "retail". The atmosphere is dour and uninspiring - more like a 1970s department store! The merchandise had a similar effect on me as the tent. It seemed like lots of different companies were all essentially offering the same heavily logoed tourist products. The best value item I could find was a £1 pen masquerading as a three-inch wooden tee. Also available was a baseball visor at £21, an umbrella for £35 and a set of cufflinks with the Randa logo at £15. The worst value of all was probably the children's T-shirts at £18 each. 21st century technology My "most unusually priced item" award goes to the golf balls - with the Royal Lytham and St. Annes crest. Three golf balls for £10, or six for £25.50. How much, then, would a dozen cost? Maybe it's something to do with the little box they come in. The Taylor Made stand offered the most interest to me. It boasts a piece of 21st century technology that allows golfers to play a shot while analysing the ball speed, spin rate and launch angle. Armed with this information, any golfer is then able to select a driver from the range of three alternative designs based on their own personal swing characteristics. Now, if that doesn't help your drives, I don't know what will.
|
Top SOL at The Open stories now:
Links to more SOL at The Open stories are at the foot of the page.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Links to more SOL at The Open stories |
![]() |
|
|||
------------------------------------------------------------ BBC News >> | BBC Weather >> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- © MMIII | News Sources | Privacy |