So, the RBC Heritage, right? Everyone around here talks about it. You hear the buzz every year. For the longest time, I just kinda let it pass me by. Always seemed like a bit of a production, you know?

But this year, I figured, what the heck. My neighbor, Jim, he goes every year, raves about it. Plus, I had a bit of free time coming up, so I thought, “Let’s actually do this.” The main thing was, I wanted to see what all the fuss was about myself, instead of just hearing about it secondhand.
First order of business, obviously, was getting the tickets. Now, I’m not a fan of these online scrambles. You hear stories, right? Websites crashing, everything sold out in minutes. It’s enough to make you not even want to bother sometimes.
It reminds me, actually, of this one time, years back. I was trying to get tickets for my daughter to see some band she was crazy about. What an absolute circus that was. I spent a whole morning hitting refresh on my computer, the phone glued to my other ear trying their hotline. Got absolutely nowhere. Just a load of frustration. Ended up having to buy from some reseller, paid way over the odds. I swore then, if it’s that much hassle, I’m out.
Anyway, for this RBC Heritage thing, I decided to keep it simple. I just went looking for their official way to get tickets. Fired up the old laptop, typed it into the search bar. Took me a minute to find the right page, you know how some of these event websites can be, a bit all over the place. But I got there.
Found the section for buying tickets. They had a few different options, like some fancy week-long passes, grounds passes, that sort of thing. I wasn’t looking for anything complicated. Just wanted a decent day ticket to go, walk around, see some golf.

So I picked the day I wanted. The process was surprisingly straightforward, I’ll give them that. Clicked on the type of ticket, how many I needed – just one for me this time. Then it was the usual stuff, filling in my name, my email. Then the payment page. Pulled out my card, typed in the numbers. Clicked confirm.
And that was pretty much it. A few seconds later, an email popped into my inbox. Confirmation! Tickets secured. No fuss, no drama, which was a real relief after past experiences. Honestly, it was smoother than I expected.
So yeah, got my ticket sorted. Now I just have to actually plan the day, figure out how I’m getting there and all that. But the main hurdle, getting the ticket, that’s done. Looking forward to it, actually. Should be a good day out.