Dugger
1. This is a global website read by many a passer by.
2. You are perfectly welcome to ignore Melvyn's threads since
3. Your responses are getting redundant and boring.
4. It would be much appreciated if you would start some architecture threads of your own as you have in the past.
5. I am sure the "many a passer by" would prefer such contributions far more than those you seem only to make on Melvyn's threads.
Way to be a politically correct suck up, Garland. Frankness is apparently not in your vocabulary.
Okay....I'll play along....be a good little follower rather than a smart-mouthed punk.
Melvyn, just what the hell are you trying to say here, because most of the time I cannot for the life of me understand your ramblings.
Golf is a tremendous game.....a fabulous game that means a lot of things to different people.
The moment you strictly define how it ought to be played is the very moment you castrate it.
Some enjoy the walk in the park, sucking in fresh air while feeling the heat from the sun on their face. Maybe they don't keep score, maybe they even improve their lie by kicking their ball out from the long grass from time to time. They might use a cart because their feet have been giving them trouble and using a skycaddie makes acquiring yardage a much quicker exercise, thus keeping the pace of play brisk.
460cc drivers allow them to keep more balls in play, and means less torque on their body since their swing speed has decreased over time.
I'll tell ya what else is good for petty worries and ennui, it's a tall stiff cocktail at the turn.
I was playing the other day and one of my playing partners launched his drive right into a large flock of birds. It was a low sizzler...and the bird didn't stand a chance. We got up there and the bird was dead. Stone cold killer this guy I was playing with.
So your quote is sort of misleading. Golf doesn't furnish all the generous excitement of good sport without the necessity of killing any living thing.
I saw a dead snake on a golf course once too.
Just sayin'