Gents,
I must admit I am a rookie when it comes to taking caddies and to date I have used them on 4 different occasions which include Whistling Straits, Erin Hills, Oakland Hills South, and Lost Dunes. My experiences at Oakland Hills South and Whistling Straits were outstanding and I would rate those caddies an A+. They single bagged and really made me feel like I had their attention on every hole. They were excellent at giving me course knowledge, correct yardages, layup spots and were excellent at reading greens. They easily saved me 5-10 strokes and really helped me enjoy my golf experience.
At Erin Hills and Lost Dunes I had a different experience as my caddies were pretty new to the course and double bagged. With that being said they were still great guys and they hustled and were fun to talk to but really struggled with yardages, reading greens, and I often times had to go get my club from them since they were on the other side of the fairway. It really was an issue on the greens as well as it seemed like it was a chore for them to give me a line and they always seemed to be in a rush since they had two guys to work with.
I am not totally against double caddies who double bag as I have to believe there are plenty of caddies who can easily handle it and do a great job. But my experiences were not great and I stilled tipped them the full suggested amount which at the time was $65 on top of what the clubhouse charged. Am I selfish to want my caddie all to myself?
At Whistling Straits I clearly got what I paid for but at Erin Hills I felt like I got robbed. It felt like I had a junior caddie instead of an A Caddie.
The question I have is what do you do if a caddie is a great guy to talk to but pretty much stinks at course knowledge, reading greens and getting you the clubs you need? Would a $40-$50 tip be ok or is that just flat out wrong?
I struggle with this and am truly looking for what others think.
I plan to play Sand Valley soon and I am wondering if a junior caddie is the way to go?
I have heard they have some great caddies there but since its a new resort many of them are new as well. $60 for a junior caddie and I understand that they wont be able to read greens all that well but is it worth the risk of getting somebody who struggles?
So what do you do if a caddie does not meet your expectations? Do you just pay the guy the suggest value (which is what I have done in the past) or do you pay him the value you think he is worth? I am not saying stiff the guy but is it wrong to tip $40 vs. the suggested $65??
I also could not believe that both Erin hills and Whistling Straits take around $24-$35 of the caddie fee. That seems wrong to me