6 Ways to Enjoy Golf More

February 6, 2010 · Filed Under Golf Swing Tips, Golf Tips · Comment 

Although golf is game loved by many, there are times when we wish the game was never invented. You can make those times less frequent by using a few of these suggestions.

1. Don’t ride, walk the course. Many suggest that walking is not only the purist way to play the game, but it can also improve your score. Walking gives you a better opportunity to scan the layout of the course and consider strategy for your next shot.It is also a great way to get a little exercise. And, if you’re usually a golf cart person, you can save a lot of cash on cart rental fees. With some of the money you save, you can buy yourself a golf push cart and you won’t even have to carry your bag.

2. Don’t play from the blue tees. Unless you are at least a ten handicap or lower, why bother making the golf course more difficult than it has to be. If you’re shooting in the 90s or triple digits, making the game harder doesn’t make much sense. Take the extra level of anxiety out of the equation and play the white tees.

3. Play different games with friends. Compete in games other than score, instead of just playing the same old match with your buddies.Some examples might be most fairways hit, least amount of 3 putts, or most 1 putts.

4. If it is your honor, take it. You just birdied the hardest (or easiest) hole on the golf course, it’s your tee, take it, you earned it. Challenge yourself to get another one; you will be surprised how often you can have two birdies in a row if you are actually trying.

5. Enhance your lie.When you are playing a leisure round of golf, there is no way you should be playing the strict rules of golf. If everyone played by these rules, the average round of golf would be at least 6 hours at courses all over the world. Golfers would be looking for every lost ball for five minutes and returning to the tees all day after hitting there first ball out bounds. Since we bend them to save time, why not bend them to improve your lie, something you can actually benefit from. Play winter rules all the time.

6. Reduce your expectations. If you are an average golfer, you play golf twice per week if you’re lucky. On top of that, you don’t practice as much as you wish you could. You can’t honestly think that your game is exactly what it should be. Don’t be so hard on yourself when you are not playing well, just enjoy the game itself. Everyone has bad days, even professionals.

If you follow these few tips: play the white tees, walk with a golf push cart, give yourself a good lie, don’t play for the best score, play for the honor, and be realistic about your expectations, the game will be much more enjoyable.

Bushnell Yardage Pro Review and Field Tests

February 1, 2010 · Filed Under Golf Swing Tips, Golf Tips · Comment 

I received the rangefinder as a Christmas present (I asked my wife for it) and have used it during several recent rounds. I have read mixed reviews, but I really like it. The rangefinder is a binocular that contains a cross-hair sight. You place your target in the cross-hairs and press the button to get the LCD readout of the distance.

The first three parts of the review were top notch, but the last one did not meet our expectations. That is the feature department. Now keep in mind that this is an “Entry Level” device, but the Bushnell Yardage Pro lacks one feature that we would like to see in GPS units at this price range. The lack of any distances other than distances to the green was the big one. Other entry level GPS units had up to four points of interest such as hazards or bunkers to assist you with playing a hole properly. The Yardage Pro lacks that feature and it is something that we feel is needed at this price range.

Since wearing a watch is a swing hazard, I’m usually going back and forth to my cell to check the time. Not anymore! I can leave my cell in the car and forget about it! Not the biggest technological breakthrough, but if youGÇÖre anything like me, you will find it very useful.

To address the unit’s sole serious flaw up front, it is this: “PermaFocus.” That translates to bad old fashioned “fixed focus” when you remove the fancy label. Meaning that there is no provision to focus the 6 power monocular to your eye for a sharp image.

The ergonomics of the Legend are good. It is designed for convenient one hand operation. The Power button is at the rear of the upper surface, above the eyepiece, where the index finger naturally falls when the unit is held normally. The mode button is on the left side of the unit, where it can be thumb activated as required. All corners are rounded for comfortable holding.

Yes, I find it gets a bit more tricky to hit the flag from about 220 and beyond, but I’ve found tricks to get better at that and you will too. Plus, if I’m over 200, I just make sure that I have some clue where I am as a sanity check. If Bushnell figures out how to incorporate optical image stabalization into these units, that’ll make them even better. But for now this is just fine.

I love this golf gadget. It sure makes the round more pleasant than pacing off yardages, speeds pace of play, and I can honestly say that I think it’s saving me strokes already. What a great toy. Get it as a gift if you can.

Check out more optical rangefinders advice at opticalrangefindes.com. You can also read some great guides on the Bushnell Yardage Pro Legend there as well.

GOLF INSTRUCTIONS for CHIPPING

January 28, 2010 · Filed Under Golf Swing Tips, Golf Tips · Comment 

Requiring the utmost authority in golf is a shot that is also one of the shortest in golf. Golf instruction chipping without authority can be thin, fat or even shanked shots. Whatever can go wrong usually will. However hit your chip shots with authority and chances are you’ll be tapping in for your next.

A few things lead to poor or bad chipping and a lack of authority, they are fear, lack of strength, and indecision. Think of your club as a horse.(weird analogy but stay with me ) If your not confident, it has this uncanny knack of recognizing your concern and plays up. Far more satisfactory results are achieved if you show it who is boss, who is in charge.

The best way to ensure authority is repetition. Bring authority back to your short game, take on these two strength drills now.                                           
First Drill- Hold your club horizontally out in front of your body, then cock the wrists. It’s a simple exercise but, like Drill 2, repeat for 10 repetitions, build up gradually and get some strength and flexibility into those wrists.

Drill 2; Hold your arms outstretched with a weight (a couple of golf clubs or 440gm cans are fine if you don’t have hand weights) and lift up and down with your wrists.

Strength of your Wrist
It can be difficult to hit a shot with authority if the club feels heavy in your hand. A pitch is a firm wristed action so the wrist must secure the club to ensure you’re in control of your swing. Spending some time with these drills can assist many golfers, particularly beginning players with weak wrists, it won’t hurt.

Be Decisive
There are countless articles covering club selection and type of chip shot for a particular situation. What’s your decision, try to erase any doubt whatsoever, convince yourself that it’s the correct choice.
Practice repeating the same golf shot over and over again on the practice green.
Placing a basket or bucket in your backyard at home and practice chipping into that, can really hone your skills. You will be well on your way to getting chip shots close, when your decisive and have strong wrists and can hit the target regularly.

Learn the proper chipping set-up; weight on lead side, ball slightly back of centre in your stance, eyes and hands closer to the target than the ball is at address.
Hinge the club slightly during the backswing with your favoured or dominant hand, learn to hinge and to hold.
Hold this position post impact, in the follow through. That is, don’t let the clubhead pass under your lead hand before impact. The ideal position at impact is the back of that hand should be nearer to the target than the ball is. After reaching impact, you may release the club a little.
Don’t tighten up. Scooping a chip shot into the air, getting to wristy is an amateures number 1 difficulty.

Golf Instruction Chipping Tip- Bet on the percentages

It might look fancy in the air but there’s a higher risk of error when you increase your loft for a greenside chip. Extra loft decreases the margin for error at impact and decreases the size of the landing  zone on the green.
The second bounce check-up is one of the hardest shots to play in golf, so it’s best left to the pros.
I encourage any amateur golfer to go for maximum roll and minimum air time, remembering to land the ball on the green.. This means using less-lofted clubs and relying on a simple formula when faced with a chip around the green. An amount of on course management is primary to any shot in golf. As is a brush up on the finer points of golf instruction for a balanced posture

Golf Instruction Chipping, the method
When chipping, your target is not the flag, your focus is on your landing spot. This will change because of the state of the green, and what lofted club you are using. Start with a five iron, and increase the loft depending on  the amount of green available, using the following ratios.

  • 5 IRON

20 percent flight, 80 percent bounce and roll. ?

  • 8 IRON

33 percent flight, 67 percent bounce and roll

  • WEDGE

50 percent bounce and 50 percent roll.

Practice chipping with an 8 iron to master the bump and run, then you can start with your wedge.

Here is a great golf instruction chipping tip I learned a while ago, try this. In your normal stance for a chip shot, grab a ball and throw it underarm at your target to gain a feel for how hard you will need to swing the club.
Use this method to imagine how much strength is needed to fly the ball onto the green and roll up to the hole, throw the ball two thirds of the way onto the green back to the cup. This is a great technique to get a feel for the shot.

I hope these few golf instruction tips will help you to improve your short game and reduce the number of shots in your round the next time you go out on the course.

Golf Swing Training - Important To Developing Golf Abilities

January 9, 2010 · Filed Under Golf Swing Tips, Golf Tips · Comment 

Tiger Woods Golf Swing

All golfers know that developing a good golf swing is pivotal to becoming a good golfer. As a golfer improves his swing, he gains more confidence in his game and soon sees his scores dropping, as shooting under par becomes more and more common. In light of the fact that golf is such a popular sport and hobby these days, it is not surprising that golf swing training is also very popular, especially with beginners.

One of the simplest approaches to golf swing improvement is to use a special golf training club. This type of club can help to increase the golf swing speed and the power behind the swing as well. If you really want to improve your golf swing, then you cannot really find a golf training device that is more specific or effective.

It has been proven over the course of many years that the best way to undertake golf swing training is to use a golf swing trainer. This is a club that is specially weighted. The additional weight of this golf trainer provides resistance and if you repeatedly practice your swing with this resistance, then you have the potential to quickly improve your overall swing.

The most apparent and direct result of using a golf training club correctly is an increase in driving distance that a golfer will notice almost immediately. This is because the golfer is training the muscles that he uses during a swing to work against the resistance of the weighted club, which provides an element of strength training. When the golfer picks up a standard club, his muscles will have been readied to hit the ball harder than ever before because of this strength training.

Training to improve the golf swing is primarily a function of repetition combined with muscle training. It is helpful to go through the complete range of motions for a standard swing, or an even bigger range of movement if possible, with as many repetitions as possible.

However, it is more important to make sure that you are also practicing the correct stance during this training. Using a golf training club, or any other type of golf training aid, without taking the time to learn how to use them correctly will only result in frustration and disappointment. Practicing a swing that has poor form will not improve your game. If you are not sure whether or not you have proper form, then you should seek out the help of professional golf swing trainers.

Another side benefit of golf swing training is that it can go a long way to making your backswing and follow through movements better and more connected, making your swing flow from beginning to end. This is important because you can deliver more power and hit the ball further. It is also a very good idea to do other kinds of exercises that will strengthen and stretch you body in other ways that will serve to make you stronger and more capable on the course.

Are you a novice golfer who does not know how to swing the club at the ball? Do you constantly find yourself swinging aimlessly at the ball and it not going where it is supposed to go? You need some golf training. Even the golf greats such as Tiger Woods had to start somewhere and it all begins with practice. Even though you might not be a natural at this type of sport that doesn’t mean that you have no chance of actually becoming a geat golfer with enough practice and time. if you have some interest in perfecting your golf swing or simply have to get some additional assistance, click here to get some more information: Golf Training Aids also Golf School and at Harrisville Golf Lessons

Develope Your Own Set-up Routine

August 6, 2009 · Filed Under Golf Swing Tips, Golf Tips · Comment 

How to golf for beginners and having your own set-up routine is important. Whether your a beginner or intermediate player you have to have your own unique set-up routine that you use to prepare yourself for every shot.

Everyone has their own perspective and outlook about golf. It is how you approach the game that will determine how good a golfer you will become. You have to be prepared to experience failure when playing golf because it will happen. It is the greatest game there is and if your willing to put in some practice and develop your own routine while your playing you can become very good at this game.

I will explain how I approach my set-up and hopefully it will help you as well. For myself, golf is a very relaxing game. It doesn't matter if I shoot a great score or a lousy score, I just enjoy playing. I enjoy the beutiful scenery, the smell of the fresh cut grass, but the one thing that attracts me to golf the most is the fact that this is a game that can never be mastered. You always have room to improve.

I always go to the golf coarse early enough so I have time to warm up on the practice tee. I cannot stress enough the importance of getting loose and warmed up before you start play. This is when your mental preparations will begin. I
have been playing for so long that I have developed my own personal routine from addressing the ball through the completion of the swing. You should develop your own personal routine as well.

While on the practice tee I usually place an iron on the ground help align me with my target. This helps me when I set my feet to make sure they are placed properly. I will stand behind the ball and visualise in my head what I want the shot to do. When I am setting up for a shot I start out with my feet together and I check my distance from the ball. Once that is done, the next thing I do is position club face behind the ball making sure it is square to the ball and in line with the target.

I then set my left hand first making sure it is in the proper position. If my left hand is in good position than my right hand fits right into place. I then spread my feet apart starting with my left foot first. I always start with my left foot because my left foot determines where the ball is placed in my stance. This will also allow me to adjust the ball in my stance when I need too.

After my feet are in place, I slightly open up my left foot. This will allow me to clear my hips easier since my flexibility has tightened up over the years. it is not that easy for me to turn my body through the swing as it was when I was younger.

My set-up is done and I am ready to complete my swing. If everything is done correctly the ball will go where I want it to.

Golf is all about repetition and repeating the same swing over and over. If you develop your own set-up routine this will take you one step closer to being a more consistent golfer.

Ralph Miller is the author and creator of How To Golf For Beginners and Advanced Players. You can visit his site at          http://www.HowToGolf-RM.com and while your there you can register to recieve 7 Free Swing Lessons.

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