What have women done at your clubs?
Should there be tees about 4500 yards?
The women at most clubs I am familiar with suffer group insanity. They generally oppose any new tees, for reasons I am unable to comprehend.
At my mother's club, Mesa CC, they put in some forward tees to shorten it from 5800 yards, and the women refused to play from there. So they sit--unmaintained the last time I was there.
My aunt, however, has been a rabble rouser about this issue, and pretty much refuses to play any course at over about 4900. If i suggest going somewhere, her first question is, "How long are the forward tees?"
She's convinced my wife, who is now a disciple of Alice Dye who has been insisting that it's silly for women to only have one tee to choose from, when men have two, three or four. She even had some posters made of this
http://dyedesigns.com/documents/twoteesystem.pdf graphic to hang up in the clubhouse. She's been more or less POed all summer, since our new owners eliminated the new 4600-yard markers that were installed last year. They weren't even formal tees, they were just markers, and the women who liked them were even willing to use flat plates.
But no luck, and they even had the course re-rated without the forward tees.
What's even sillier is that our (Kansas) Women's GA, rates courses, and rarely rates more than one set of tees for women. So our college golfers, who play the whites @ 6400 and sometimes the blues, don't know how to post scores... so they don't. (Of course the USGA has a method to post from unrated tees, but almost no one knows it."
My wife and have the same handicap currently--10--and on our course, there are only a couple of par fours that she has ANY chance of reaching in regulation.
If you think this isn't a problem, look at these charts
http://www.usga.org/handicapping/articles_resources/Men-s-USGA-Handicap-Indexes/http://www.usga.org/handicapping/articles_resources/Women-s-USGA-Handicap-Indexes/My 9.6 index puts me at the 75th percentile among golfers with handicaps. Her 10.2 puts her at the 96th percentile. To be equivalent to me, she'd have to be carrying a 20 handicap.
The fact that less than 3 percent of women carry a single-digit index proves to me that golf is too damned hard to be any fun for women.
4500-yard tees would be one great place to start.