Casa de Campo is proud of being more than a golf resort; it is a family destination with a wide variety of activities dedicated to The Sporting Life.
In the interest of learning the breadth of those parameters, I spent part of this afternoon engaging in the second most ridiculous activity of my life. The first, in 2004, was a bungee jump from a bridge in Arrowtown, New Zealand.
Today’s, which involved more laughter but less risk, was a spirited game of Donkey Polo.
Casa de Campo has fine facilities for the well-heeled who would like to play the more traditional game — or as I will forever think of it after today, “horse polo,” a linguistic back-formation akin to “analog watch” or “natural grass.”
I doubt those strong and elegant riders and their spectators spend as much time laughing as we of the asinine set did.
This “game” — there’s a ball and there’s scoring, but it’s really an exercise in mass hysteria, a clusterf*** of the first order — is played atop four-legged equus asini by two-legged homo sapiens who wield brooms used for hitting or sweeping a ball past a chalk line.
I’m not predicting that it will soon pass soccer and lacrosse on the ladder of sporting interest. Not even ESPN8 is likely to carry it, and you won’t be selecting fantasy teams any time soon.
But if you’re up for a heavy dose of absurdity, with chance of falling off your ass and landing on same, this is the game for you.
I was game, so I ambled out onto the playing ground, and towards a waiting burro whom I’d be weighting heavily soon. Stirrups? No. Helpful kneeling by the animal? No. You can swing your leg over a little donkey, can’t you?


The bizarre encounter continued until at last we’d had enough, or could barely hang onto the brooms as we convulsed with laughter. The after-adrenaline carried us to the nearest bar, much as it had when I did that bungee jump in NZ.

