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  • Golfers Seek Healthy Deduction From Courts

    As an American transplant, it was surprising to find that golf is not tax deductible in Sweden. In the United States, golf is used often by companies as a business deduction for client contact and corporate marketing. Even individuals can deduct club and association dues, in most circumstances.

    In Sweden, corporations can deduct expenses for exercise programs for their employees. Many large companies have extensive gyms for their people, and getting your dues paid at private gym is not uncommon.

    However, in Sweden, golf and some other popular sports that lead to longer life and good health, are excluded from the tax deductions. Svensk Golf has put together a pretty good overview of how is golf being ignored by the Swedish government for its health benefits. Swedish Golf Online brings it to you edited in English here.

    Researchers, golfers and health care professionals agree. Golf is good for your health. But Swedish politicians have a different view - meaning exercise is still not deductible for businesses.

    Leif Olsson retired in June after 50 years with Thermia Heat Pumps in Arvika, Sweden. The 65-year-old Olsson has never had a sick day over those years. Olsson has never cost his insurance company and the Swedish taxpayers a dime. Olsson thanks golf for his good health, a sport he has been faithful to for over 20 years. He plays golf with various friends twice a week during the season, on Thursday and Sunday mornings.

    "It is clear that golf is a healthy activity. It moves the body while you concentrate on the game. It's a great workout physically and I stay focused mentally, as well," he told the Swedish magazine, Svensk Golf.

    Leif might feel good from golf, but it is not a way to fitness. Not according to Swedish politicians.

    From January 1, 1988, a Swedish company could make tax-free deductions for their employees' exercise regimen. There were, however, a few caveats. It had to be a simple physical sport that can be practiced by almost everyone, and sports that require more expensive facilities, equipment and peripherals, and most commonly practiced away from work such as golf, sailing, horseback riding and downhill skiing should not be subject to tax deductions.

    It's not just Leif Olsson who believes golf is good for your health. There is scientific evidence that golf is good for health, as well.

    The Karolinska Institute, one of Sweden's largest centers for training and research, accounts for 30 percent of the medical training and 40 percent of the medical academic research conducted in Sweden. In 2008,  a study was released from the Institute entitled, "Golf, a Game of Life and Death." It stated that golf reduced mortality in Swedish golf players.  The results were published in the research journal, The Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports, and it stated that golf is so good for health that golfers live an average of five years longer than non-golfers of all ages.

    That golf was not deductible as healthy exercise surprised the researchers behind the study.

    "There are few sporting activities which have  better health benefits than the sport of golf. If I were a politician, data like this would make me happy that almost 600,000 Swedes play golf, which is obviously positive for the Swedish people's welfare," said Ulf de Faire, one of the co-authors of the study.

  • Celtic Manor Congratulates Ryder Cup Players

    Sir Terry Matthews, the owner of host venue The Celtic Manor Resort, has congratulated the golfers who have won places on, what Sir Terry believes, is the strongest European team ever assembled for The Ryder Cup.

    A European side containing eight of the world’s top 20 golfers was finalized on Sunday when Captain Colin Montgomerie added his three wildcard picks to the nine automatic qualifiers that were decided upon completion of the last counting event, the Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles.

    Montgomerie selected Padraig Harrington, Luke Donald and Edoardo Molinari to join qualifiers Lee Westwood, Rory McIlroy, Martin Kaymer, Graeme McDowell, Ian Poulter, Ross Fisher, Francesco Molinari, Miguel Angel Jiménez and Sweden's Peter Hanson for the match against the United States of America on October 1-3, 2010.

    The Chairman of the Celtic Manor Resort, Sir Terry Matthews said: “I congratulate every member of the European team on winning their place in the team. It is a considerable achievement both for those who qualified automatically and for those who were awarded wildcard selections.

    In my opinion, this is the strongest European team ever assembled and I look forward to welcoming these very talented players to The Celtic Manor Resort in four weeks’ time. I have no doubt they will meet an equally determined American side and we all anticipate a fantastic week of the finest sporting competition.”

    At the start of the season, Montgomerie urged his Ryder Cup contenders to play in this year’s Celtic Manor Wales Open to better acquaint themselves with the Ryder Cup layout and, in Donald and Molinari, he has picked players who shone in that tournament.

    Donald finished third on his first appearance at Celtic Manor in June while Molinari was just a shot further back in fourth. With tournament champion Graeme McDowell one of the highest placed team qualifiers after his sensational US Open triumph a fortnight later, and Wales Open runner-up Rhys Davies invited to be part of the team room in a non-playing role, Montgomerie has surrounded himself with golfers who have performed well on The Twenty Ten Course.

    Like McDowell, Poulter and Jiménez return to Celtic Manor with fond memories as the Wales Open winners of 2003 and 2005 respectively.

    In all, seven of the 12 players who will bid to regain The Ryder Cup from the Americans have played in this year’s Celtic Manor Wales Open and only Westwood and Poulter have yet to play the new Ryder Cup layout in competition.

    “I think it’s a definite advantage for Europe to have so many of the team who know the course well,” said Celtic Manor Director of Golf Courses Jim McKenzie. “A good number of them also have the added confidence of having played very well on The Twenty Ten Course.

    Although I think US Captain Corey Pavin is right when he says there is nothing tricked up about this golf course, there’s no doubt the more you play The Twenty Ten Course the more you learn about it.”

    Pavin adds his four captain’s picks to complete his team next Monday, September 7. They will join automatic qualifiers Phil Mickelson, Hunter Mahan, Bubba Watson, Jim Furyk, Steve Stricker, Dustin Johnson, Jeff Overton and Matt Kuchar.

  • Sweedih Golf Federation Re-Shuffles the Deck

    There will be a new look to the Swedish Golf Federation as changes are being made in the organization.Right on the heels of the announcement of a drop in membership and, worse, a drop in the number of tee times booked, the Swedish Golf Federation announces a change in the responsibilities of its management.

    Jan Ekblom will have responsibility for overseeing investment in business analysis. General Secretary Gunnar Hakansson takes over operational responsibility in the area of Business & Events and Bo Bengtsson has been named Deputy Secretary-General.

    "We are now strengthened on analysis that will produce material making it easier for the Federation and the golf clubs to make more informed and better decisions in tough economic times. This is a priority that is fully in line with our stated mission to spend more on communications to better illustrate the benefits of our sport," says the Swedish Golf Federation General Secretary Gunnar Hakansson.

    Jan Ekblom will work with business analysis. He begins his new duties immediately and will leave his present position as Head of Business & Events.

    Per Svensson and the golf tourism project will be moved from the GIT to Business & Events. Per also will be working to develop new business ventures.

    "We will focus more on our business now as the economy brightens, in particular, by strengthening Per Svensson's role to be responsible for new projects, besides tourism issues. I will take the role of operations executive," said Hakansson.

    There will be a strengthening the department of Club & Construction. Anna Bauer will be Project Manager and Operations Coordinator. She moves from the position of Project Manager for the Golf School.

    Internal IT, Internal Service and GIT will merge into one department with Bo Bengtsson as Director and Eva Bergstrom as Coordination Manager. This merger will provide better service to clubs, golfers and Federation partners. As noted, Bo Bengtsson is simultaneously appointed as the Deputy Secretary General of the Federation.

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Points of Interest

Brahehus Castle



Usually, road side attractions mean you have to stop and look at something tacky. And large. Sometimes, though, road side attractions are just that - attractive.  Sometimes, you’ll find a sight bereft of all tourism.  Sometimes, it’s even free.

In Småland, a region in southern Sweden, just north of Jönköping, is Brahehus. Today, Brahehus is an impressive ruin. In the 1650s it was an impressive country castle.  Unfortunately, it never got much use and it burned down in 1708, leaving a shell of stone walls.

Since then, it has stared out over the waters of Lake Vättern as Sweden’s busiest highway (the E4) was built right next to it. In fact, you have to walk under the highway to get to the Brahehus.

As it must have been hundreds of years ago, the view over Lake Vättern, one of Sweden’s largest lakes, is amazing. Visit the castle right around sunset. You’ll be able to watch the sun go down while looking out over the lake. When darkness falls, the castle is then lit up by several spotlights.

Brahehus isn’t a tourist destination.  It’s just a stop along the way to somewhere, wherever that may be. But as you drive by and Brahehus fades, you’ll wish you had stopped. So do. Pull over, stretch your legs, and wander around the ruins of a 17th century Swedish country castle, imagining what living with that view must have been like.

You can follow more of Marcus on his blog @ A Swedish American in Sweden

The Swedish Golf Museum

Anyone who is interested in golfing history, books and old clubs can visit the Swedish Golf Museum in Landskrona.  The museum is part of the clubhouse area at the Landskrona Golf Club. The museum is open year round and admission is free.

Jorgen Martensson is the curator at the golf museum., and he estimates the museum has  about 7 000 visitors a year.

Everything associated with golf history is on display. There are balls, clubs, bags and items of interest around the history of golf's development. There is an international section on the first floor, where visitors can watch a movie about golf's history. The  national display on the second floor shows how golf has developed in Sweden. There is also have a large library containing a few thousand books.

Martensson believes that golf's history begins today and goes backwards. He says, "Young people today are not interested in just looking at old stuff. They think that dad's old clubs are history, and grandfather's, well, we will not even talk about what youngsters think." (laughter) "So we always work to develop the exhibit, and during the winter, we will build a display with even a bit more modern clubs."

The Swedish Golf Museum

Location: Landskrona GK.
Erikstorp
261 61 Landskrona, Sweden
phone: 0418-44 62 60

Open: All year round,  with the same hours as the golf club's reception.

Price: Free admission.

Homepage: www.svenskagolfmuseet.se

Sweden's Ice Hotel:The Ultimate Place To Chill

Ice Hotel
Jukkasjärvi, 11 miles from Kiruna
www.icehotel.com
From $400 for a snow room, from $535 for an art suite

Both include breakfast and sauna.

Ice HotelConceived by Yngve Bergqvist, a river-rafting guide who wanted to lure visitors to the Arctic north during the winter, the Icehotel started out in 1990 as nothing more than a crude igloo. Now, it's a fanciful ice castle that's rebuilt every November with an unparalleled level of artistry -- which explains why each winter 16,000 guests pay hundreds of dollars a night to sleep on a slab of ice and thousands more make the trek just to tour the rooms for the day.

Last winter, German furniture maker Jens Paulus and American industrial designer Joshua Space created a space-station room straight out of "Star Trek," with giant carvings of the sun and moon on opposing walls and twinkling lights in the ceiling. British decorator Ben Rousseau and graffiti artist Insa devised the Getting Cold Feet suite, with oversize high-heeled ice shoes beside the bed. Twenty-nine unadorned snow caves offer a somewhat less pricey and more purist experience.

Since no hotel would be complete without a bar, the artists also sculpt a chic space where guests can warm their innards with an Icebar Jukkasjärvi, a mix of vodka, blueberry liqueur, blue curaçao syrup and elderflower juice, sipped from a cube-shaped ice glass.

Then there's the chapel, where designs etched into the ice walls resemble stained glass. About 150 couples tie the knot here each year, some brides bundled in snowsuits, others dressed in white wedding gowns, their teeth chattering as they recite their vows.

Watch a Lapland / Ice Hotel video here.

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IF YOU GO ...

GETTING THERE: A round-trip flight between New York and Stockholm on SAS costs about $700 in midwinter (www.flysas.com). From Stockholm, take a 16-hour train ride to Kiruna (from $44 round trip). The Icehotel is a $13 bus ride away.

Travel Out of This World: ICE HOTEL has been hand-selected as a Virgin Galactic Accredited Space Agent (ASA).

WHEN TO GO: The hotel opens every year in early December and closes at the end of April. You have a chance of spotting the northern lights in December and January, but those are the coldest months -- temperatures can dip to 45 below.

WHAT TO PACK: Think wool and fleece layers; avoid cotton, which can trap moisture and make you colder. The hotel supplies boots and hats. For details, see www.icehotel.com/winter/adventure/dress.

WHERE TO SPLURGE: Don't miss the guided hotel tour ($37 per person). And how about an ice-sculpting lesson ($75 per person)? Or a six-hour snowmobile safari to see moose at their winter feeding grounds ($400 per person)?

WHERE TO SAVE: Tour the Icehotel by day, and then spend the night at Hotel Kebne in Kiruna (www.hotellkebne.com) from $100)

Art al fresco in Stockholm

Millegården

Herserudsvägen 32 | Lidingö

 

Not one who would remotely be considered an art afficiando, believe me when I say that anyone visiting Stockholm will be doing themselves a disservice if they don't viist the home of the artist Carl Milles, Milles Gården.

Carl Milles was a young Swede who had taken a job to teach gymnastics in Chile. On his way to South america, he stopped off for a bit of holiday in Paris. There he met the famous sculptor Roden ("The Thinker"). From that day on, the rest, as they say was history.

Milles work is showcased all over the world, and New Yorkers may know him for his work that is showcased at Rockefeller Center. Milles worked on a very grand scale, and later in his life his sculptures began to soar upwards toward the heavens, elevated on pedestals meters high ("The Hand Of God").

Carl Milles met his wife in Paris, and they moved back to live in Stockholm. The park/museum at Milles Gården was their home and studio. The house and property were acquired over a 50 year period. The gardens contain plants from all over the world, and the Austrian corner was dedicated to his wife, who was born in Austria. In her honor, Eidelwiess was planted there and still flourishes.

Like I said, I'm not an art buff and was almost dragged to the museum. After four hours wandering the home and grounds, I hadn't had enough and was sorry to leave.

Milles Gården is located in NW Stockholm and any taxi can get you there as well as the bus service.

milles

 

 

 

 

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