Jump to content
Check out the Spin Axis Podcast! ×
Note: This thread is 2109 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

Recommended Posts

Posted

Up front, I will say I am heavily prejudiced against golf carts. I enjoy the walk, feel like I play better when I walk, and have never had a problem outpacing the carters. With that said, for health reasons I have had to start using one as the choice is cart golf or no golf. There are some bright sides...whereas when I walk, with nobody in front of me it typically took  55 to 65 minutes per nine, I was 53 minutes on the front until I ran into a group on ten. I have a very convenient place for my speaker and water.

 

With that said, there are certain things that really irritate me about cart golf.

First off...keep the cart in the designated areas. So tired of seeing people parking on the fringe of the green. Even the lowest goat track typically has a sign "keep carts 30' from greens" (or it might be 30 yards, I don't know...I don't get that close so it is a distinction without a difference to me. When I get close to the green I park at the next tee box and head back to my ball with the appropriate clubs). Don't drive through that "environmentally sensitive area" to get to your errant shot.

Second, parking the cart in front of the green when they went over the back...or off to the left when the next hole is off to the right...seriously,

Third, and this is obviously anecdotal...cart drivers with radios tend to play them really loudly. I love my music but work hard to ensure I cannot hear it more than a couple steps from the cart. I am not trying to help people 3 holes over who don't care for same type of music I am "enjoy" my music.

Fourth, these aren't bumper cars or ATVs.  You aren't cool when you are jamming the brakes trying to slide sideways, puddle jumping over tree routes and basically treating it like your own dune buggy. Two separate carts have been wrecked in the last couple months by people trying cross the creek not at the designated location. Idiots.

Fifth, those signs on par 3s that say "keep carts on path from tee to green on this hole"? They don't have exceptions because you had a crap swing and shoved it 50 yards into the fairway off to the right. Part of taking your medicine is following the established rules and walking over there, not driving over because you have a cart. Oh, on that 180 yard par 3 you chunked it 80 yards? Sign is still there, walk to your ball, don't drive the cart there.

 

Side note: Having a cart doesn't give you the right to drive into the adjacent fairway your errant ball went into when a group is teeing off, stand there obliviously trying to choose a club, and shanking one back.

 

There is more but that is probably whiny enough. Carts have a place in the game letting people such as the retirees I often golf with continue to golf. Physically decrepit people like myself as well. Done right, they can speed play and make it enjoyable for people who don't want to walk. Long or hilly courses that are a tough walk become more playable. And for some people (my wife for example) they are an intrinsic part of the game. I just want people to have some basic consideration. Keep the cart in the designated areas, don't drive it abusively, don't use it as an excuse to be rude to your fellow golfers, put some thought into the most appropriate place to leave it for pace of play purposes... 

 

Rant over.

 

For now.

 

 

  • Like 1
Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

Sounds more like an etiquette issue more than a golf cart issue

  • Like 1

My Swing

Taylormade M1 | Mizuno JPX 900 Forged (4-GW) | Titleist Vokey SM7 54/58 | Taylormade Spider X

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted
24 minutes ago, darthweasel said:

So tired of seeing people parking on the fringe of the green.

LOL. When I served on a state board and their code committee I found out that there is a federal disability law that went into effect a few years ago that permits people to drive their cart onto the tee box as well as onto the green itself!

So be careful if you try to get in the way of someone trying to exercise their federally-protected civil liberties. 😁

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

We have guys that drive carts where they want. Sings mean nothing. Most of the offenders are members. It used to get me upset, but the staff wouldn't do anything, so I don't worry about is anymore.


  • Moderator
Posted

Carts should definitely be 30ft from all greens and tee boxes, or better yet stay on the path when you are close.  The other big thing that bugs me, as a worker, is letting kids drive.  I've seen more accidents occur from kids driving than adults.  The only 2 accidents last month occurred because a kid was driving when they were not supposed to.  The first bullet point at our shop in the cart agreement is that you must be 21 to rent/drive the cart. 

One kid T-boned a cart right in front of the pro shop while the dad was on the passenger side.  We all say, yeah that'll never happen if I let my kid drive, but that dad was saying the same thing prior to the accident.  A wide open fairway, no trees, whatever, but go near anything at all, and the adult should be driving.

  • Thumbs Up 2

Philip Kohnken, PGA
Director of Instruction, Lake Padden GC, Bellingham, WA

Srixon/Cleveland Club Fitter; PGA Modern Coach; Certified in Dr Kwon’s Golf Biomechanics Levels 1 & 2; Certified in SAM Putting; Certified in TPI
 
Team :srixon:!

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

Cost for using a cart is becoming ridiculous.
Some courses are charging $30 per player ...

I own my own cart, pay an annual trail fee (Too much IMO)
I always have other Members ride with me (Club still obtains Cart Fee from Riders)
And the most ridiculous new club cart fee - Club charges Members an Annual Rate $900  (unlimited family rate)
while they charge Private Cart Owners an annual Trail Fee - $1200 !!!  😡 WTF ...

Rant Over

Johnny Rocket - Let's Rock and Roll and play some golf !!!

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

A few years ago, in a scramble tournament (maybe I don't need to say anymore) a couple driving up the cartpath to the clubhouse after the 18th hole drove through the wooden fence and went over the cliff.   A forested cliffside saved them.  But now that small mountainside has been cleared of trees to allow sunshine to reach the green below.  They both survived (alcohol helps here) and they ended up owning a busted up power cart.  If they do it again they're tumbling down a cliffside of 100-150 feet.  Not survivable this time.


Posted
1 hour ago, darthweasel said:

First off...keep the cart in the designated areas. So tired of seeing people parking on the fringe of the green.

Maybe I've just been lucky, but I haven't really seen this. (One exception shown below) Having written that, I haven't played very much THIS year. Maybe with the COVID thing a lot of newer golfers are out there who don't know what the etiquette is? 

 

1 hour ago, Carl3 said:

there is a federal disability law that went into effect a few years ago that permits people to drive their cart onto the tee box as well as onto the green itself!

At the courses I've seen the folks who get do this get the special carts with a handicap flag on it.

There's one gentleman who often plays a course near my parents house who does take his handicap marked cart just about everywhere. He doesn't take it into the bunkers. He actually doesn't take it onto the green, but I kind of wish he would. When he gets out of his cart he uses a cane. (I shit you not, a CANE!) and walks across the green. I think I'd much rather putt across cart tracks then try to guess where the ball is going to end up after it hits one of the one inch diameter holes his cane has punched in the green. I think if I played that course often I'd buy him a special cane with a flat plate on the bottom of it to use when ever he walks across the green. Or at least one of these doom-a-hoosiers. 

c8e6a5b41319d3a6a6ec3a2bc71b0db8_480x480.jpg.2a1638a7cb81b62ed60b093c07647447.jpg

My bag is an ever-changing combination of clubs. 

A mix I am forever tinkering with. 

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted
1 hour ago, Club Rat said:

Cost for using a cart is becoming ridiculous.
Some courses are charging $30 per player ...

I own my own cart, pay an annual trail fee (Too much IMO)
I always have other Members ride with me (Club still obtains Cart Fee from Riders)
And the most ridiculous new club cart fee - Club charges Members an Annual Rate $900  (unlimited family rate)
while they charge Private Cart Owners an annual Trail Fee - $1200 !!!  😡 WTF ...

Rant Over

So $1200 per year just to use your own golf cart at the course? That's insane!

My Swing

Taylormade M1 | Mizuno JPX 900 Forged (4-GW) | Titleist Vokey SM7 54/58 | Taylormade Spider X

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

Agreed on it being the people driving as opposed to carts. Most of the places I play have GPS carts and if you go any place you aren’t supposed to they slow down to a turtle crawl and tell you to return to the appropriate place. As for kids driving, I let my son drive all the time. He’s 15 so not a huge deal. I started him out just going between the tee shot and hole and I’d drive to the next hole. After a while i turned it all over to him. The whole 21 to drive doesn’t really mean much. I’ve seen adults driving much worse than he does and you add alcohol to that and it gets even worse. 


Posted
11 minutes ago, mclaren4life said:

Most of the places I play have GPS carts and if you go any place you aren’t supposed to they slow down to a turtle crawl and tell you to return to the appropriate place.

I remember the first time I encountered one of those. My buddy went way left on one hole and crapped himself when the cart slowed down.

We had a newbie with us who was struggling and it wasn't long before the cart started nagging us about our pace.

Fun day.

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted
1 hour ago, ShaftFarmer said:

So $1200 per year just to use your own golf cart at the course? That's insane!

Golf carts increase wear on the course and increase revenue for the club. Having someone bring their own cart means that they lose the revenue, but still have to clean up the mess. If the club normally charges 20 for a cart, thats 60 fees worth. Not bad if you ride 100 times a year and own your own cart. 

  • :titleist: 917 D2 9.5o EvenFlow blue shaft    :titleist: 917 F2 15o EvenFlow blue shaft    
  • :titleist: 818 H2 19o EvenFlow blue shaft 
  • :titleist: 712 AP2 4-PW
  • :vokey: 52/8o SM6 RAW    56/14o SM6 Chrome      60/4o SM6 Chrome
  • :ping: Anser Sigma G putter
  • :snell: MTB-Black Balls
Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Administrator
Posted
4 minutes ago, Bonvivant said:

Golf carts increase wear on the course and increase revenue for the club. Having someone bring their own cart means that they lose the revenue, but still have to clean up the mess. If the club normally charges 20 for a cart, thats 60 fees worth. Not bad if you ride 100 times a year and own your own cart. 

I think the unlimited cart fee was $900 though.

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted
23 minutes ago, Bonvivant said:

Having someone bring their own cart means that they lose the revenue,

NO, they charge private owners an annual fee, plus get a daily cart fee from other members who ride in my personal cart.
I have to maintain my cart, batteries, tires, brakes, shocks etc.
The club gets a free ride and revenue from private owners at our expense and charge us more than the members annual fee.

 

Johnny Rocket - Let's Rock and Roll and play some golf !!!

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted
1 minute ago, Club Rat said:

NO, they charge private owners an annual fee, plus get a daily cart fee from other members who ride in my personal cart.
I have to maintain my cart, batteries, tires, brakes, shocks etc.
The club gets a free ride and revenue from private owners at our expense and charge us more than the members annual fee.

 

Does the member fee include carts?

25 minutes ago, iacas said:

I think the unlimited cart fee was $900 though.

Oh, then sure, a bit silly. Still, carts harm golf courses, mostly over time, but sometimes immediately. 

  • :titleist: 917 D2 9.5o EvenFlow blue shaft    :titleist: 917 F2 15o EvenFlow blue shaft    
  • :titleist: 818 H2 19o EvenFlow blue shaft 
  • :titleist: 712 AP2 4-PW
  • :vokey: 52/8o SM6 RAW    56/14o SM6 Chrome      60/4o SM6 Chrome
  • :ping: Anser Sigma G putter
  • :snell: MTB-Black Balls
Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Administrator
Posted
22 minutes ago, Bonvivant said:

Oh, then sure, a bit silly. Still, carts harm golf courses, mostly over time, but sometimes immediately. 

That's not a bit silly. That's flat out insane.

  • $900 - No other expense to you, but unlimited use of our carts. For your whole family.
  • $1200 - All the expense of maintaining your own cart (and run it: gas or electricity), PLUS $300 on top of that, to use your own cart.

That's how I read it.

Oh, and you can't even invite your buddies to ride in your cart… because they have to pay, so they may as well get their own cart.

Stupidest thing I've heard this week @Club Rat.

  • Upvote 1

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted (edited)

My club charges me $120/mth to use my own golf cart and the fee applies during winter when there is snow, or even during covid shutdown earlier this year when the club was closed. They also charge a cart fee ($18) to anyone who rides with me in MY private cart that I have already paid to use on the course!

Everyone drives their cart up to the fringe of the greens, even the headpro and staff so you cannot fault members for doing the same. 

This course is in a residential community (but a separate business entity) and there are no gates to prevent anyone from driving on the course. What annoys the crap out of me are parents who allow their underage kids to drive carts (rule is 16 with a license plus insurance) but I have seen kids so young that they had to stand up inorder to hit the pedal and be able to see above the steering wheel....young kids driving their friends around, driving on the fairway against golf traffic when people are playing, or groups of 5 teenagers with 1 set of clubs in a 2 seater cart (kids hanging on like monkeys) sneaking on to play...The club knows about all these issues but they are not doing anything about it...

Edited by FlyingAce
Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted

It is true that carts can cause hare but I think the real problem is inconsiderate drivers of those carts.  I think some people believe "90 Degrees" and "Cart Path Only" apply to everyone except themselves.  The other day I saw  person (intentionally not saying "Golfer") move the rope to drive into an area.  He got out of the cart, pulled two stakes to lower the rope then drove 20 yards into the fairway to the ball.  Then drove back to the path leaving the rope on the ground.  And to be clear, there was no handicap flag on the cart.

That is the only time I saw that happen but have seen ropes on the ground on many occasions on many courses over the years so it must be more common that I would have thought.

Stuart M.
 

I am a "SCRATCH GOLFER".  I hit ball, Ball hits Tree, I scratch my head. 😜

Driver: Ping G410 Plus 10.5* +1* / 3 Hybrid: Cleveland HIBORE XLS / 4,5 & 6 Hybrids: Mizuno JP FLI-HI / Irons/Wedges 7-8-9-P-G: Mizuno JPX800 HD / Sand Wedge: Mizuno JPX 800 / Lob Wedge: Cleveland CBX 60* / Putter: Odyssey White Hot OG 7S / Balls: Srixon Soft / Beer: Labatt Blue (or anything nice & cold) 

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Note: This thread is 2109 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Want to join this community?

    We'd love to have you!

    Sign Up
  • TST Partners

    Carl's Place
    PlayBetter
    Golfer's Journal
    ShotScope
    The Stack System
    FitForGolf
    FlightScope Mevo

    Coupon Codes (save 10-20%): "IACAS" for Mevo/Stack/FitForGolf, "IACASPLUS" for Mevo+/Pro Package, and "THESANDTRAP" for ShotScope. 15% off TourStriker (no code).
  • Popular Now

  • Posts

    • No one should measure a joint mobility away from that joint. If you go to physical therapy, they are not measuring your knee mobility based on your midline. It is based at the joint. Shoulder mobility should be measured in reference to the shoulder joint. 
    • He's using a driver swing, while I used the iron swing. Bryson goes from about 65° B to 15° B, hence the 50°. If you bend your right elbow, you're going to pull your hands across your chest some. Conversely, if you abduct your right arm and hold onto a grip with your left arm, you can see how extending the right elbow as we do in the golf swing during the downswing will "pull" the right shoulder/humerus forward (adducting it, as going from 65° to 15° of abduction is). Even people who pull their right shoulder WAY too far around them eventually get it "back in front" when their right arm/elbow extends. So, such a motion shows up as shoulder adduction even though the movement that causes it is just widening the trail elbow. The left hand on the grip almost "pulls" the hands forward as the left arm can't stretch much (there's some shoulder protraction, but that's almost maxed out at P4). Oh, I downloaded it and watched it (and commented there) before he blocked me. It's what led to him posting the comment in the "update" above. 😄  Single shoulder range of 75°, and that's going out well into the follow-through. 50° Max range up to impact. Manavian's video is bad. He keeps saying "midline" which is just a horrible way to look at it. He also kept saying that the club was moving that amount — also wrong. Adding left and right together is really freaking dumb. Another golf instructor said "That's like saying the player has 100 degrees of knee bend (adding left knee bend to right knee bend) 🤦‍♂️" (similar to what the biomechanist said about squatting). Also, see my post above about elbow bend. That's why Plummer’s alignment stick demo is so intellectually dishonest. A golfer can't get anywhere near that position on the left with his left hand on the alignment stick (quoted below).  
    • That makes no sense at all.  so, I watched that Instagram. Here is a summary...  Bryson.... Address: Trail Shoulder 0 degrees adduction. P4: Trail Shoulder 65-deg abduction. Impact: Right shoulder 15-deg abduction. P9: 10 degrees adduction. Rory... Address: Trail Shoulder 16 degrees adduction. P4: Trail Shoulder 26 degrees abduction. Impact: Right shoulder 0 degrees abduction.  P9: 18 degrees of adduction.  DJ... Address: Trail Shoulder 4 degrees adduction. P4: Trail Shoulder 42 degrees abduction. Impact: Right shoulder 2 degrees abduction.  P9: 15 degrees of adduction.  Their point is that arm doesn't stay on the trail side. That the arms have to get across the chest from P4 to P9. I mean they do. What matters is the rate of which it happens relative to the position of the swing. The trail shoulder at P9 is not abducted a lot. The range of that total abduction movement is like 40 to 70 degrees. Bryson might be an outlier. Rory might be an outlier as well.  A couple of points.  1. None of them had any adduction at impact. So, this tells me the trail arms stays on the trail side of the body at impact. Is it moving towards lead shoulder, yes. It doesn't happen till post impact. The right side of the body is moving towards the target, so the arms don't have to as much as people think.  2. Trail shoulder adduction from Impact to P9 is 18 to 25 degrees.  3. P9 adduction of the trail shoulder is only about 2 to 12 degrees more adducted than at address. The arms/hands stay in front of the chest a long-time post impact. If Rory, from his address position just rotated his body towards the target and raised up his arms so he is at P9. He basically didn't have to move his trail arm further across his chest than where he started at address. Visualize that for a bit. I bet for people who tend to stall and drag their arms across their body to hit the ball, that would emphasize how much the arms stay in front of the body and how much you have to turn.             
    • Do you know how Manavian is measuring his shoulder adduction-abduction that purports to demonstrate 50 degrees or motion in Bryson's downswing? I know the broader biomechanics research/scientific literature on this suggests shoulder adduction-abduction is only a modest contributor of force generation in the downswing, so I'm definitely not convinced by anything he's arguing, I'm just curious how different people can be claiming to use ostensibly the same "data" to tell a much different story.
    • I have an update… I don't have much of a response, because the fact that they would ADD the numbers for the lead and trail shoulder together… I mean, wow. I was giving them too much credit. Nobody would think to assume they were doing THAT. That's beyond comical. One of the biomechanists I talked to put it this way: "So if I squatted down and went from 180 to 90 deg knee angle, then I would say 180 deg range of motion because I have two knees?" I'd type more (maybe), but honestly, I'm laughing a bit too hard. 🤣 Update: Mini Manavian blocked me on Instagram, so I cannot see his post showing Bryson with about 50° of range of motion (with a driver) from P4 to P7, and 75° only if you go out to the mid-follow-through. What a terrible loss for me. 😉 
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Welcome to TST! Signing up is free, and you'll see fewer ads and can talk with fellow golf enthusiasts! By using TST, you agree to our Terms of Use, our Privacy Policy, and our Guidelines.