Its better than Stella imho.Your best post ever.
Its better than Stella imho.Your best post ever.
That's what I meant . . .I have put so many spammers on Ignore lately that I am starting to get nothing but blank pages.
I only use wooden tees and when broken I reuse the shortened tee for iron or hybrids off the tee. As I said before, errant ("lost") golf balls, broken tees and any other foreign objects in the grass that the mowers may run over aren't good for the blades. So pick up the plastic tees as well and throw them away . . . or maybe you could start a plastic tee pyramid?I see the old Newest Neighborhood thread is still here, right in the neighborhood where it was created.
My latest golf-debris project is collecting brightly-colored bits of broken tees to display in a glass jar. Most of the ones I see are white or natural wood color, so I am only picking up a few of those as background.
I only use wooden tees and when broken I reuse the shortened tee for iron or hybrids off the tee. As I said before, errant ("lost") golf balls, broken tees and any other foreign objects in the grass that the mowers may run over aren't good for the blades. So pick up the plastic tees as well and throw them away . . . or maybe you could start a plastic tee pyramid?
They were once made with sand by using a small mold. A metal tee would scratch the club face, never heard of them . . . and the "low-drag" usually "feather tees" remind me of a John Daly story. Big John was playing in a pro-am and one of the amateurs asked him for a tip on how to hit the ball farther. Daly told the guy that when teeing up his ball he needed to lean the tee as far forward towards the target as he could without the ball falling off the tee. In amazement the amateur asked how much more distance would he gain by using that technique, to which Daly replied, "About an inch".Most tees are made from wood in the well-known tee shape, painted white, and of a variety of lengths. Some of them, however, look like jr-high woodshop projects. I have also seen ads for metal tees, but I have not found any - perhaps they are too valuable to actually use (o topo valuable to leave behind). Some tees are promoted as having the least drag on the ball or words to that effect. I was never a good enough golfer that that would have made any difference. I have a theory that some tees are made to break when used, thus increasing their sales.
So, you've expanded your felonious thieft scheme to an even more criminal enterprise that now raises RICO implications. The destruction of stolen property, and by handling these "tees" to tear off just the portion you desire to steal, you litter golf courses with the vestiges of once proud fully intact tees that golfers never purposefully leave behind tee boxes and thus are never lost or abandoned property. " THIEF ! "I see the old Newest Neighborhood thread is still here, right in the neighborhood where it was created.
My latest golf-debris project is collecting brightly-colored bits of broken tees to display in a glass jar. Most of the ones I see are white or natural wood color, so I am only picking up a few of those as background.
Apart from the simple and perfect design of the traditional Victor rat trap that is composed of a simple flat piece of wood, and wires to form the snap and spring, and my electrocution trap that makes disposal via a chuck of the dead rat out to the open land behind our home, versus the gory unsnaring of the carcass, the unpainted golf tee generally "free" at the starter's window is perfect.Odd tees --
Most of the ones I see are white or natural wood color, so I am only picking up a few of those as background.
I have put so many spammers on Ignore lately that I am starting to get nothing but blank pages.
Any pair of blue tinted sunglasses collected in your felonious journeys? I misplaced my Dr. Strangelove sunglasses. Can't find them anywhere.Odd tees --
Any pair of blue tinted sunglasses collected in your felonious journeys? I misplaced my Dr. Strangelove sunglasses. Can't find them anywhere.