All your comments and opinions are interesting, some I find difficult in understanding if you are being serious or just trying to take the preverbal P. As no smiley I take them at face value.
My opinion is that Distance in all its forms from markers, books, Caddie or electronic aids are nothing but a Red Herring. It is just another ways to get money from a golfer who is so desperate to improve his/her score that he will try anything. These aids are IMHO the equivalent to a drug addict seeking out his fix before every shot, to the point that distance has taken over the Game.
My point from the start has been that we do not need theses aids. Our bodies, well mind and body overrule the information gained from pacing, booklets, caddies or electronic devices as soon as we take our final look prior to taking our shot. At That moment like our hearts which are involuntary muscles (working totally independently), our mind takes over, recalculating the distance but this time through our eyes, thus minimising the previous information from those outside souses. The shot is controlled automatically from the last feed of information passed to our brain from our eyes and not from the latest gadget available in the Pro Shop.
In fact you are not even cheating, because you mind has acted like your involuntary heart and set the action in motion from information lastly generated from your eyes – not your toys.
So again I say we do not need theses aids, they are nothing more than a con, a hindrance and waste of time and money for the golfer. If you use them you do so due to your own lack of confidence and to play golf you certainly need to have an abundance of confidence. Your Catch 22 situation, not mine- real inward confidence or outward display of toy confidence – that is the conundrum.
The proof is for you guys to persevere, first to get use to not using the distance aids, slowly letting the eye/brain the freedom to adjust and then trust your own abilities. Mark my words in time (weeks not months) your game will be back to your previous standard and if you continue to use your eyes, you may find it far more enjoyable. Be aware that the grass is not always greener on the other side but you might be tempted to take up your toys again hoping to find a little more in your game, alas you will just revert back to yet another golfer suffering a loss of confidence in his/her own ability.
David
Caddies have always been there to carry lose individual clubs as the bag did not appear until the end of the 19th Century. The big Matches of the 1832 when two Gentlemen played for a £500 bet (Approx £500,000 to £750,000 in today’s money) used Caddies who just carried the individual clubs. Back then they did not have Pro Golfers, nor was distance even a consideration. The first Professional Golfer is regarded as Allan followed by Old Tom but that was not until the mid to late 1840’s. I have no record of Allan acting as a Caddie but I have of Old Tom who would Caddie for Col. J O Fairlie.
Again I have found no records or articles on Distance as we discuss it today. I even checked the records of when Young Tommy in 1870 downed the ball in 3 on the First Hole 578 yards at Prestwick in The Open of that year. Not one mention to the distance he took or the length still outstanding. So todate and using my own family connection, I firmly believe that distance is a 20th Century sickness. Please remember that it’s our game that has become easy, their game was with Hickory and Gutty and they judged a course by its hazards.
AS for my position re Caddies, I feel I have made it rather clear that I would only use them to carry my clubs and discuss the shot AFTER it was taken as I feel that’s the best way to learn and understand by having experienced the shot . As for distance, as I said there is no record of distance as we refer to it today.
Jamie
My thought a few weeks ago went back to TOC when I was young and the weather made you look forward to that brandy in the warm pub afterwards. Alternatively, I would select Askernish as my model (
http://www.askernishgolfclub.com/) or see Steve Salem report dated August 28 2009 Titled the Soul of Golf…. Askernish, hopefully you will see what I believe would combat distance aids, certainly is the wind got up a little.
I have played on many a new course for me but not to my friends. Yes they have the advantage, but so does height, weight and confidence, I attending for the Game. Not forgetting I’m there to enjoy myself, so why would I even ask you a distance question when in truth yardage means zero to me. You could say 160 yards, but it does not register because my eyes do the judging for me through my brain down to my body, all else is a total waste of time as I mentioned above. It’s like telling me when in a car that 160 yards ahead is a set of traffic lights, shout a distance is meaningless, as my eyes and brain are already working on the action required. Instinctively vs. inappropriate information than might lead to confusion, so give me instinctively every time.
Regards making up your own yardage book, my first thought when reading that’s was how sad I am for this guy, he’s lost sight of the reason he started play golf in the first place. Jamie if I had to resort to doing that to play golf, I would never set foot on a course again. The passion dead, the spirit gone, fun, what fun if you have to delve that low for something that is meaningless and pointless in the first place – because we do not need distance information to play golf, be good at it or enjoy it.
Perhaps some of you guys need to take a step back and re look at the game you play. I play the Royal and Ancient Game of Golf.
In all honesty I have never really wanted to stop you playing your game, but I have always asked that you call it by its appropriate name. Be it Cart Ball, fine then ride your carts ten abreast if that your thing, play your game in the mountains or on a computer, have someone Caddie for you while someone else plays for you while you watch via a video link from the club house. Fine but just do not call it golf. By all means call it American Golf, Mountain Golf, Hi Tech Golf but not Golf. In other words do as you wish but please honour the real game by being true to it.
Using Distance information as we do today cheats you the golfer of the real fun and enjoyment that only comes from testing yourself unaided. Get it right or wrong you will still come away satisfied knowing that it was all down to your own efforts and tomorrow is another day.
I hope I have answered all the questions directed at me.
Melvyn