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Water hazards are where golf balls go to die, but this golfer manages to blast his way out of the muck and the mire at the Metropolitan Intercollegiate championships at the Seawane Club course in Hewlett Harbor, N.Y., on May 10, 1956.
If it’s not possible or practical to play a ball in a water hazard, a golfer receives a one-stroke penalty. Technically, golf’s rules since 2019 don’t use the word “hazard” anymore, preferring “penalty areas.” But golf officials might want to rethink that phrasing considering a 2023 Times article that reported on the ultimate water hazard — a shark-infested lake — at the Carbrook Golf Club near Brisbane, Australia.
“It all started in 1996 when raging floods swept six young bull sharks from a nearby river into a 51-acre lake near the golf course’s 14th hole,” wrote Annie Roth. “When the floodwaters receded, the sharks found themselves stuck, surrounded by grassy hills and curious golfers. The sharks spent 17 years in the lake, sustaining themselves on its large stock of fish and on the occasional meat treat provided by the club’s staff.”
Yes, there’s an ending to this “Shark Tank” tale: “One shark was illegally fished out,” The Times noted, “while the others vanished after subsequent floods.”
This made-to-order image is printed on giclée archival photo paper and is available framed or unframed. Framed photography comes ready to hang with a removable wire attached to the back. Choose from a lightweight ayous wood or a gold or silver metal frame to customize the frame best suited to your space. The print comes from The New York Times’s extensive archives, known as the “morgue,” which houses more than five million photographic prints that date back to 1905. It is available exclusively from The Times Store.