Michael Blake
For the record, I can’t normally walk more than 100 yards or so before needing to rest or sit to relieve the pain in my lower back. I currently do not play any golf due to this & another problem. Therefore, I fully understand what carts mean to golfers who have physical handicaps.
Your posts which are directed at me are generally full of some sort of smart-ass comment(s), if that your thing then I hope it gives you pleasure. However, if you are serious about golf, being a member of GCA.com I presume you are then you might actually join in the debate with some serious and constructive comments either for or against carts etc. I did not miss you little snipe re the gloves and banning them, but have a good snigger, go laugh your head off, because it is always easier to destroy than to be constructive.
Golf may mean just a ride in the park for you with the ability to drink as you go. That’s not my way of playing, I like to enjoy my game and then have my beer with all my friend in the clubhouse after the round. Golf is not about winning, because we all can’t win. It is about enjoyment, fun with or without friends. By friends, I mean long term or those who have just joined your four ball for the round. You and others like you miss the whole point of golf thinking it’s getting the best score, of winning, of being the best, but that just bollocks it’s about you, your ability to understand the game, the course and yes through that you just might get a smile on your face. We don’t care about your score, we want to know if you have enjoyed the game, had fun and perhaps experienced the underlying spirit of the game.
I very much understand that it would be so easy for me to use a cart, but then I will no be true to myself, I will be breaking a tradition that goes back nearly 250 years. That I will not do. The game is important but Golf is far more important to me.
Purest, fanatic, traditionalist perhaps but what about just an honest guy who wants to see the game he has play for nearly 50 years survive in its most majestic form, that of walking.
Melvyn