Looking out my bedroom window past the bluebirds and cardinals vying for position on the seed-filled feeder, past the doves and the squirrels shamelessly settling for the leftovers below, past the obligatory but unused lawn furniture, past the turtles and storks and herons, and past an alligator swimming slowly, but purposefully, toward his place in the sun, I can see the second green and the third tee of the golf course where I live.
In these days of pandemic and social distancing the golfers each drive their own cart. On the putting green players stand six to ten feet apart, no one touches the flagstick, there are no high fives, no shaking hands.
The green carts are driven down the cart path one-by-one from two green to three tee, like four green baby ducks following each other, identical, synchronous, six to ten feet apart.
After teeing off the players in the carts again follow each other one-by-one to the end of the path before scattering to the fairway or the bunker or the woods or the edge of the lake where the alligator has fallen asleep in the sun with his mouth open as if he is warning the golfers to maintain the appropriate social distance. Considerably more than six to ten feet apart.