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what are you guys talking about? i'm off to play my 5th since i got back boxing day. Golden Eagles North, 8 a.m. wOOt! |
new toy. 24k gold putter and KJ's grip, blingitty-bling! http://members.shaw.ca/northvanmike/Images/Image1.jpg |
isnt 24k gold the most malleable? |
heading out to coyote creek today to hit some balls |
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just got beat up @ King's Links..95. oh well, Golden Eagles North tomorrow morning,try again. |
This is the crazy time of year. Golf in the morning, skiing at night! |
i hit up the range this weekend only to discover something terribly wrong with my swing. time to dismantle it and try to put it all back together. |
we got frost delayed @ Golden Eagles on Sunday so we booted it across the street to Swaneset and they put us on the Links course right away, first time for me. i've played the Resort a few times so i thought it would be a nice change. my thoughts were it's got more sand,water, tighter tee shots, but not a links course . still enjoyed it though, well maintained,beautiful fairways. the guy in the pro shop was a bit of a peckerhead, telling us to keep up the pace because the members will get upset at us,blah,blah...faack. |
Have any of you guys played "The Falls" in Chilliwack? it's worth the drive if you're thinking about getting out and about this season with your buddies. Amazing course. |
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gas powered carts? thats bush league. |
^ its expensive to just convert to electric if you've already have gas. probably better just to keep the gas ones, its about $5000 for a new gas cart and i think electric's are more + you gotta convert your cart shed to charge it. weather's been kind of funny these days with rain and some frosty mornings. are there any sales goin on anywhere? i think golftown had some demo sale last fall, do they do that more than once a year? |
1. i'm sure it's not $5000/ea if you're buying 20 or 30 of them. 2. they can always sell the gas ones to offset the price, and im sure the maintenance cost on electric is less costly. 3. its probably expensive to equip carts with gps, but courses do it all the time. |
^ hey don't you play hockey w/ ray and those guys on wednesdays? anyways..... you can also lease them too. but for some courses the head pro has to pay the expense out of his own pocket so if you got gas, and they are working properly then theres no real advantage in changin to electric unless you carts are breaking down. some courses put their revenue back into stuff like electric carts, some courses have both gas and electric and slowly weed out gas ones. the golf course i work at, the carts here come straight out of the head pro's pocket so if the carts aren't broke he doesn't fix them haha. btw i HATE frost. |
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87 on a soggy Burnaby Mountain this morning, Belmont with the three stoners tomorrow. :) |
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hahahah....uhhhh...none unfortunately. although maybe i can pass along tips to book tee times? man i haven't actually played any real golf since last november so im kinda jacked to play something. i got some new clubs and tweeked a bunch of older ones, btw anyone interested in buying a scotty cameron putter? |
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At present, there are 55 carts at Northlands and there are 10 more on the way... On average, there are usually 3 or 4 carts down in maintanence getting worked on, but those broken down carts are ususally the result of customers crashing into things and wrecking the alignment or brakes, and nothing to do with the cart being electric. so in that sense, you are right, electric carts are less costly to deal with then gas. The only problem I have with Electric carts is that as the batteries get older, the charges do not last as long. As a result, when the same cart is going out for the second or third time in a day (you bastard 2nd twilighters who are too lazy to walk and take carts!), the likelihood of it dying on you is pretty good if you got an older cart. Each cart has 8 batteries, each costing 40-50 dollars a piece. This makes it difficult to justify spending the money on new batteries when the carts are only leased. As for GPS at Northlands, it is on the way.. its just a matter of fitting it into the budget. I heard that each GPS unit costs several hundred dollars and that you have to close the course in order to have the GPS company come out and plot the course. I personally think the GPS will be a nice feature to have on the carts, especially since northlands is a difficult course with many blind shots. Unfortunately I know many customers will have an issue paying more money for the cart rental (5$ or so) when they do not intend to use it. hopefully what i have said makes sense... any more cart questions, just ask :) |
northlands is my favorite course... i hope that the addition of gps wont jack up the green fees... i think that course has enough going for it that gps would take away from the experience of playing a course like that. i find that relying on a computer to make your club selection takes away from the game, and northlands is a course where club selection is the difference between a great day and an ok day. bkw... scotty cameron studio newport by chance? if so, pm me, i want! |
man finally hitting my Sumo2 decently this year, at the range today was consistantly hitting 280-320 :D we'll see how it translates onto the course though lol |
^ wow 280-320 on the range?? geez man hook up some yardage man!!! =) which sumo did you get? the non square'd one? that one is one of the better esthetically pleasing drivers out there i think, 2008 model. is anyone up for some golf in april?? come on im sure we can get a foursome to hack up some course |
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i'm down for a 4some in april. |
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any course suggestions anyone? |
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