Johanna Camarta lines up at the tee at the seventh hole of Hamilton’s King’s Forest Golf Course and swings.
Her ball launches off her driver as she connects, sailing towards the green. It’s an impressive shot for any golfer, but in this case, it’s so much more.
Camarta can’t see the ball at her feet.
The Alberta native is one of 31 participants in the Canadian Open Blind Golf Championship this week.
“What I really like about it is you can play [golf] with anybody,” Camarta said. “The skill level is quite large. It’s from great to beginner.
“Blind people, seniors, grandparents can go with grandkids. It’s not judged on gender — there are no boundaries.”
There are different sight classifications for competitors: those with no light perception in either eye, with five per cent vision, and with 10 per cent vision.
Camarta has no central vision, due to degeneration and cataracts.
“It started when I was 25 — it hemorrhaeged in the retina, and then it just continually had more hemorrhaeges,” she said. “When the ball is at my feet, I can’t see the ball or my feet. I try to check out where the ball is in my peripheral vision, and then my coach will bring the club up behind the ball, and when I look down, I don’t see anything.
“I see a little bit of a blur. That’s why I use yellow balls.”
While golf is usually an individual sport, blind competitors require a coach who accompanies players around the course. The coach describes the hole, the approach, and the depth of where the flag is on the green.
Coaches will get down and set the golfer’s club behind the ball, and position it properly and explain the hole to the player, so they get a visualization in their mind of what they’re about to do.