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Ball Marks
Just finished playing the Palmetto Executive course. The number of unrepaired ball marks on the greens is unacceptable. I repaired 2-4 marks on most greens. Given time I could have done more. I’m full time here and I view these courses as my own so I take care of them.
Tee times at these courses are filled every day this time of year so there’s lots of play this time of year. If golfers do not take care of these courses by the time the high season is over I fear the full time residents will again have reason to complain about conditions. |
Most likely, preaching to the choir... We are normally the first group out in the morning and I still find 1 or 2 additional marks to fix per hole.
Played in a league back in MN that always followed the state High School championship and they never fixed one mark, or it felt that way. They had their coaches with them if they didn't instruct them to do it, then they should have done it... |
How do you get ball marks on the green?
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FAr too many playing that do not know what the players responsibilities are.....and far to many just think it's someone elses job....like sanding divots and raking traps.
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If I see someone in front of me, walk through a bunker and not rake it, I call them out. If I'm close enough to see them not fill/replace a divot ... I say something. Barring clubs providing babysitters on every hole, the only way it's going to change, is for golfers to call out their playing partners and others they see, abusing the golf course. See something, say something. |
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It been a problem on every course I have ever played on and every club at which I have been a member.
Many players don't launch the ball well and don't think they make a ball mark and often they don't....so they quit looking for them. Everyone needs to fix two ball marks on every hole. Half of players (everywhere not just here) don't even carry a divot repair tool. You can use a tee of course, but many have never even been formally taught how to correctly repair a ball mark. |
The last thing we need is for some of these people to bend over to try and repair a ball mark. Half of them can't even get their ball out of the hole without a ball retriever on the end of their putter. Fixing a ball mark will lead to falling over head first and next we have a medical emergency on our hands. I will gladly fix two ball marks on every green.
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There are times I can't find my pitch mark but I always repair others. Sometimes marks can't be seen until hours later.
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You can go to the gym and watch people not put their free weights back. Problems everywhere not just on the golf course.
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Played Bonita Pass on Monday. Fixed two or three ball marks every hole. It gets old especially at my age! But still lucky to still play.
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Folks from right around NYC will do that a lot. Folks from right around Columbus, Ohio just cuss to themselves. |
Two is the magic number for ball mark repair. Ideally yours and one other but not necessarily.
Less than two and ball marks proliferate. More than two slows down play and becomes a chore. One man’s opinion. |
Short video on how to repair a ball mark.
How to properly repair a pitch mark. Using the Gannet™ divot repair tool. - YouTube |
I still do not have any idea what so called ambassadors do, especially on the executive courses but also on the Champs.
Of course, it is the players responsibility to rake the traps and fill in divots and repair ball marks and drive carts in a 90-degree fashion to preserve the fairways. The ambassadors drive around the course doing nothing in my opinion. Could they not when they see a golfer not doing their due diligence say something? Someone needs to monitor those that commit the infraction. |
New to TV, moved here FT last October. I’ve done my share of executive golf. I always get to know whom I’m golfing with. My observations are the snow birds are more prone to not fixing ball marks on the green nor filling divots with sand elsewhere.
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Hunting for ball marks
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The greens on the 3 Hendry courses were in very good shape. It appears that whoever mowed the Sweetgum greens went down to the dirt on some holes.
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Old entitled people don't think they have to repair them. And have you ever noticed how many cannot even bend over to pick up their ball let alone fix ball marks. They pay their amenity fees! LOL.
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I see this all the time as well. I usually fix 2 or 3 ballmarks on every green.
Too many lazy players just think someone else will fix it. |
Ball Marks and Care of the Golf Course
Been teaching for 30 years. The very first lesson starts with Proper Care of the Golf Course. Ball Marks, divots, and bunkers to start. This creates a washed golfer.
A person who respects the golf course first. A person who doesn't pee in the pool at the expense of others. Golf is cow pasture pool. Imagine shooting pool with divots on the table. Not fun. With 250 rounds of golf played in a day. Around 125 players don't hit greens. They are chipping. If the other 125 fix 2 ball marks it covers the field. It would be nicer if they did not have to do that. But that is a perfect world. The unwashed golfer, one who has never been taught proper care of the golf course, or missed that part of their first lesson, does at some point need to be baptized. Sorry to say it will be by the washed as it should. And this is why the washed don't want to play with the unwashed. Overtime the washed will move away from the unwashed so they are not babysitting each round. And they don't want to see a golf course abused in this fashion. As a persons handicap lowers they start to gain more respect for the golf course. And sometimes this is why clicks form. No washed player(educated to respect the golf course) will willingly play with an unwashed golfer.(no respect for the golf course who think the grounds crew is supposed to do that. A washed golfer will do this care regardless of age or physical ability to bend over. I have seen them get on one knee to fix a ball mark. Dropping divot sand at waist level only requires the strength to lift the bottle. The first move when you reach a bunker is to look for the rake. I have even passed people the rake if they have issues. So, yes! The washed golfers need to baptize the unwashed wherever they can. Otherwise, the group of unwashed will grow and conditions will worsen. So, if you are unwashed, it's time to get baptized and show some respect for these Fields Of Dreams. :bowdown: And if you are unwashed, don't call yourself a golfer, your not. Your doing something, but it is far removed from golf. Quote:
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I see lot golfers in late evenings all time practicing approach shots in last evening after closing times. When hit 15 or more from 60 plus yards out going to leave lot of dimples on greens. I sure they fixing all of them.:thumbup:
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Isn't it part of the "Ambassadors" job to fix divots etc. It wouldn't hurt if they "Gently" kept play moving, as well.
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I wonder if that would work here. |
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I think the only thing worse than unrepaired ball marks are the golfers who don't pick up their feet when they walk across the green wearing golf shoes. Played Evans Prairie today and every green was scuffed up by someone dragging their feet. You could see everywhere they walked on the green. Our whole foursome was tapping down the scuff marks.
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:evil6::cus:I think this is a topic where we can definitely blame snowbirds for this egregious behavior!:1rotfl:
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The tee boxes are getting eaten up. The ambassadors should be monitoring that and sanding those divots. |
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