Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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But maybe you should check out these facts: Quick facts about golf courses Presented by the Golf Course Superintendents Association of America 1. A properly repaired ball mark heals completely in 2-3 days, while an unrepaired ball mark takes 15-20 days to heal properly. 2. A typical 18-hole golf course covers approximately 125 - 150 acres of land. The total landmass of golf courses in the United States equals about 1/2 the state of Connecticut. 3. A typical 18-hole golf course produces enough oxygen to support 4,000 to 7,000 people. 4. Golf courses nationwide combine to filter 13 million tons of dust from the air every year. So our 693 holes of golf produce enough O2 for 269,500 people----perhaps we should start exporting it |
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#17
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I have noticed that the general sport of golf, like polo, and horse racing is participated in by a class (level) of society that tends to be LESS empathetic than say basketball and volleyball players. Certainly, there are empathetic golfers and non-empathetic volleyball players, but as a general class, those generalities would stand. We all have our tribes and that blind allegiance to our tribes is a MAIN cause of those more important, real-life problems that you refer to. The whole US stands on a knifes edge between empathy and tribal violent behaviors. Good luck! Let us hope that the meek will really inherit the earth!
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#18
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Now to your #2 point......the US landmass that is USEABLE is decreasing as we see to the coastline and fire-prone interior as we speak (current events). What will happen when we have 600 million people in the US? incidentally, if you could have lobbied for limited growth in US population to about 250 million people, then I would probably NOT be even mentioning global warming and I would NOT have any problems with golf courses. And when it is thought about the screen A.I. golf idea is a GREAT compromise. I just INVITE golfers and techies to work on it. #3.......Yes, agreed! Grass is a plant that produces oxygen and captures CO2, but NEVER as much as the forest that a golf course replaced! WE are trading information, lovely! #4........Yes agreed! But, the dust stopped was probably stopped 1,000 times more by the original forest. And a forest does NOT need to be fertilized! Thus, saving the mining of phosphates and the dollar costs and air pollution costs of the mining equipment's internal combustion engines. There is nothing wrong with a golfer LOVING their sport. There is just a downside to any sport and virtually any activity. I would call upon golfers to call for more trees to be planted along their fairways. And maybe to form a club that plants young saplings in state and national forests in areas where a fire had burned through. Also, to encourage laws to NOT allow private dwellings in state and federal forests! Thank you, sincerely! Last edited by jimjamuser; 09-05-2021 at 02:44 PM. Reason: clarity |
#19
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Tree and Rain Forest Facts Trees renew our air supply by absorbing carbon dioxide and producing oxygen. The amount of oxygen produced by an acre of trees per year equals the amount consumed by 18 people annually. One tree produces nearly 260 pounds of oxygen each year. One acre of trees removes up to 2.6 tons of carbon dioxide each year. So, 125-150 acre golf course producing O2 for 4-7,000 people equals between 27 and 56 people/acre, or 1.5-3x a "forest". So, cut more trees and build more golf courses!!!!! |
#20
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#21
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"Someone" has no idea how many trees are on any given golf course!
Real golfers know ![]() |
#22
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Exactly how much the environmental cost of golf courses would be hard to quantify and to calculate. It would take a scientific paper to spell it all out. Mining of phosphate fertilizers would be a big factor - talk about wind-blown dust! A big factor would be exhaust gases from internal combustion engines of both mining equipment and the bizzions of golf cars with limited pollution control devices on their exhaust pipes! Golf course fertilizer runoff into US water systems would be another LARGE cost to air and water quality. Any sport has costs and costs to the environment, but Golf might have the LARGEST costs to the SMALLEST number of people as a ratio. I had heard that golf was DECREASING in popularity with the younger upcoming generations. If true, this current TV Land generation may (?) be the last generation that NEEDS golf courses? Mybe the forest will return and the earth can heal itself??????>? |
#23
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Now, I can see the response already----most scientists agree that we are causing "global warming"----the same scientists that are dependent on government stipends and grants to survive. Try looking at those that are independent of the government and see what they say. |
#24
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Oh, no, it's happening again. All I did was to start a thread on the horrible conditions at Hacienda, and now we are debating global warming!!!! I'm going back to watching the Solheim Cup
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#25
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At least it didn't turn into another covid .....ummm......."discussion" |
#26
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#27
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I prefer a pre-game breakfast involving sweet potatoes in order to do "carbohydrate loading" before I head out to the GOLF course to play a solid 18 holes. I take some sweet potato fries in my golf car to munch on after about 12 holes in order to keep up my energy level. I also like to eat sweet potato fries after lifting weights or any heavy work exertion. I use GOLF for the mental relaxation (like meditation) and I use good nutrition like sweet potatoes for my energy requirements. Once you go to sweet potatoes you NEVER go back to "yucky, useless white potatoes! |
#28
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#29
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And thanks for the course condition updates guys. I almost always play either Lopez or Glenview once a week. I live in Piedmont and I can almost roll out of bed and be on the first tee in 5 minutes, whether I breakfast on white or sweet potatoes. Both of these courses have been in very good condition the last few months. (Although they did recently aerate Lopez, which I played today. Even though they were aerated, the putts seemed to roll pretty true, just a little slower.)
I like to play another Champion course during the week and La Hacienda is conveniently located and usually much less crowded that the alternatives such as Palmer or Cane Garden. But based on the reviews here, I'll settle for an Executive course until things look better. As far the the sideways direction this thread has turned, I can't understand why anyone who hates golf course would live the TV, a place whose success was due to golf. For years TV advertised exclusively in golf magazines and the golf channel. Most of our monthly amenity fee goes to maintaining the golf courses. |
#30
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Closed Thread |
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