Long white hair spills wildly from beneath the cap of the most unconventional governor in Minnesota's history as he takes a measured but highly unproductive swing at a golf ball. He shanks it into the rough along the left side of the fairway.
During a particularly aggravating stretch at the private TPC golf course in Blaine, Jesse Ventura managed to hit two trees in three shots, yet eventually score a bogey, just one over par. A few holes later he came within 15 inches of hitting a hole-in-one.
The former governor's golf game, like his politics, can be all over the place, unpredictable, hard to watch sometimes, but impossible to dismiss. Now the state's most independent Independent is contemplating his next shot.
Another run for governor? Or the White House? Or maybe back to Mexico for good, if the Eighth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overrules the $1.4 million defamation award he won over a passage in the best-selling book, "American Sniper."
In recent weeks, Ventura has said that he is open to running for vice president on Donald Trump's ticket. Politico carried the report, though there's no invitation from Trump's people.
Ventura also said he has been invited to next year's Libertarian Party convention and is pondering the idea of running for president on that ticket, even though he would not join the party.
"I would challenge the American people to make history with me," he says, "and elect the first president since George Washington, the father of our country, who does not belong to a political party."
Wes Benedict, executive director of the national committee of the Libertarian Party said last week that Ventura stands a chance of winning the party's nomination, because he is well known, "has an independent streak in him" and supported Gary Johnson, the Libertarian candidate in 2012.