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***Official Disc Golf Thread*** (1 Viewer)

I went Friday before last for the first time in over a year and shot a +8 or so (really wasn't seriously keeping score) and got a contact high too.

 
I only played two rounds this weekend at a course in Lancaster. It was a nice day. I haven't been keeping score seriously either lately (as mentioned in the prior post). For one, I don't know why but I just can not keep score in my head. I always get messed up. Also, I have been looking at it as fun and exercise... i think i might be worried that if i start to keep score and get competitive it might take the fun out of it. I have a tendency to get frustrated easily if i try and be competitive.

I did convince another one of my friends to try the sport for the first time and he liked it. He went out to ****'s right after we played and got a driver and a midrange. We are working on getting a possee together... haha.

 
After playing since 1995, I had my first Ace in mixed doubles league night on Golden Gate Disc Golf Course. Hole #2 216 ft slight up hill. Threw my Classic Roc with a slight hyzer. Nothing but chains. Funny thing was it was the second Ace of the round in our foursome as we started on the back 9.

 
After playing since 1995, I had my first Ace in mixed doubles league night on Golden Gate Disc Golf Course. Hole #2 216 ft slight up hill. Threw my Classic Roc with a slight hyzer. Nothing but chains. Funny thing was it was the second Ace of the round in our foursome as we started on the back 9.
Sweet. You guys have an Ace Pot?
 
'Fullback Fro said:
After playing since 1995, I had my first Ace in mixed doubles league night on Golden Gate Disc Golf Course. Hole #2 216 ft slight up hill. Threw my Classic Roc with a slight hyzer. Nothing but chains. Funny thing was it was the second Ace of the round in our foursome as we started on the back 9.
BOOM!
 
'Marvin said:
'Fullback Fro said:
After playing since 1995, I had my first Ace in mixed doubles league night on Golden Gate Disc Golf Course. Hole #2 216 ft slight up hill. Threw my Classic Roc with a slight hyzer. Nothing but chains. Funny thing was it was the second Ace of the round in our foursome as we started on the back 9.
Sweet. You guys have an Ace Pot?
For the weekly handicapped round Sunday morning there is an Ace Pot, but not in on tues dubs. Though it is customary for players in your group to give you $5 and then all players after round to give you $1. I ended up getting around $35 for it. Pretty sweet.
 
'Marvin said:
'Fullback Fro said:
After playing since 1995, I had my first Ace in mixed doubles league night on Golden Gate Disc Golf Course. Hole #2 216 ft slight up hill. Threw my Classic Roc with a slight hyzer. Nothing but chains. Funny thing was it was the second Ace of the round in our foursome as we started on the back 9.
Sweet. You guys have an Ace Pot?
For the weekly handicapped round Sunday morning there is an Ace Pot, but not in on tues dubs. Though it is customary for players in your group to give you $5 and then all players after round to give you $1. I ended up getting around $35 for it. Pretty sweet.
Nice. We had (maybe still have) an Ace Pot for Wed doubles. I don't think it was ever more than $50. We also had the customary 'give the guy a buck' thing as well but so many of the guys in our league were dead-beats and half-homeless it didn't always happen.
 
What are the courses around DC like? Any recommendations for a newbie? I used to play a lot of ultimate, but I'm guessing the skill sets are completely different?

 
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'Fullback Fro said:
After playing since 1995, I had my first Ace in mixed doubles league night on Golden Gate Disc Golf Course. Hole #2 216 ft slight up hill. Threw my Classic Roc with a slight hyzer. Nothing but chains. Funny thing was it was the second Ace of the round in our foursome as we started on the back 9.
Very nice. I really like the SF course. Looking forward to playing Delaveaga this weekend for the first time.
 
'Fullback Fro said:
After playing since 1995, I had my first Ace in mixed doubles league night on Golden Gate Disc Golf Course. Hole #2 216 ft slight up hill. Threw my Classic Roc with a slight hyzer. Nothing but chains. Funny thing was it was the second Ace of the round in our foursome as we started on the back 9.
Very nice. I really like the SF course. Looking forward to playing Delaveaga this weekend for the first time.
You'll love it. Its the Pebble Beach of Cali Disc Golfing. Watch out for the Poison Oak. Wear pants and bring the special wipes for post round. That stuff eats me alive.
 
playing for 2-3 years, most actively in the last 16months, and hit up over 20 courses in NC.

my bag looks like the following.

DX Aviar P&A (170ish)

Champ Aviar P&A (175ish)

DX Roc (175)

DX Roc (176)

Z Buzzz SS (178)

Cryztal Z Buzzz (176)

Star TL (167)

I don't throw anything over Speed 7 that's the TL. Can get any of the midrange out 300' or so. Can push the TL out 400' on a good day. (field distances)

Best advice I can give anyone who is just starting out... and assuming you want to get better... is to ditch all your high speed drivers. "omg its speed 13 that means i can throw it far", is only correct if you have the proper form and arm strength already to use it. Stick with a putter (doesn't matter which one, just the one that feels best) and either the Shark/Mako/Roc by Innova, or the Buzz by Discraft as your discs, again whichever feels better in your hand. After you can get the midrange consistently out to 200'+, pickup a leopard/teebird/gazelle/TL fairway driver. and don't get anything faster till you can get it out 300'+. Those discs specifically the putter and the midranges will teach you more about how to throw, good form, how to shape lines, and the various things discs can do then any of the high speed drivers.

its not sexy, but just like regular golf, you'll see your scores plummet more from becoming a better putter, rather than being able to throw 30' farther.

 
Worm is better than he gives himself credit. At least the three times we've played together has a much more consistent game than I do. Next time we get together, we'll get some field work in and work on your D and try to figure out why i'm so damned inconsistent.

 
Best advice I can give anyone who is just starting out... and assuming you want to get better... is to ditch all your high speed drivers. "omg its speed 13 that means i can throw it far", is only correct if you have the proper form and arm strength already to use it. Stick with a putter (doesn't matter which one, just the one that feels best) and either the Shark/Mako/Roc by Innova, or the Buzz by Discraft as your discs, again whichever feels better in your hand. After you can get the midrange consistently out to 200'+, pickup a leopard/teebird/gazelle/TL fairway driver. and don't get anything faster till you can get it out 300'+. Those discs specifically the putter and the midranges will teach you more about how to throw, good form, how to shape lines, and the various things discs can do then any of the high speed drivers.its not sexy, but just like regular golf, you'll see your scores plummet more from becoming a better putter, rather than being able to throw 30' farther.
This is pretty good advice. I see too many new players throwing Destroyers. I think the Gazelle is one of the best discs to learn how to throw with (not that I am very good myself).
 
Best advice I can give anyone who is just starting out... and assuming you want to get better... is to ditch all your high speed drivers. "omg its speed 13 that means i can throw it far", is only correct if you have the proper form and arm strength already to use it. Stick with a putter (doesn't matter which one, just the one that feels best) and either the Shark/Mako/Roc by Innova, or the Buzz by Discraft as your discs, again whichever feels better in your hand. After you can get the midrange consistently out to 200'+, pickup a leopard/teebird/gazelle/TL fairway driver. and don't get anything faster till you can get it out 300'+. Those discs specifically the putter and the midranges will teach you more about how to throw, good form, how to shape lines, and the various things discs can do then any of the high speed drivers.its not sexy, but just like regular golf, you'll see your scores plummet more from becoming a better putter, rather than being able to throw 30' farther.
This is pretty good advice. I see too many new players throwing Destroyers. I think the Gazelle is one of the best discs to learn how to throw with (not that I am very good myself).
:goodposting: Although I will say that I had a hard time throwing accurate drives with those 6 and 7 speed drivers when I first started. Not sure what it was but the rest of my game was progressing fine but I was way inconsistent when it came to putting drives where I wanted them. I picked up a Valk and it was perfect.
 
playing for 2-3 years, most actively in the last 16months, and hit up over 20 courses in NC.my bag looks like the following.DX Aviar P&A (170ish)Champ Aviar P&A (175ish)DX Roc (175)DX Roc (176)Z Buzzz SS (178)Cryztal Z Buzzz (176)Star TL (167)I don't throw anything over Speed 7 that's the TL. Can get any of the midrange out 300' or so. Can push the TL out 400' on a good day. (field distances)Best advice I can give anyone who is just starting out... and assuming you want to get better... is to ditch all your high speed drivers. "omg its speed 13 that means i can throw it far", is only correct if you have the proper form and arm strength already to use it. Stick with a putter (doesn't matter which one, just the one that feels best) and either the Shark/Mako/Roc by Innova, or the Buzz by Discraft as your discs, again whichever feels better in your hand. After you can get the midrange consistently out to 200'+, pickup a leopard/teebird/gazelle/TL fairway driver. and don't get anything faster till you can get it out 300'+. Those discs specifically the putter and the midranges will teach you more about how to throw, good form, how to shape lines, and the various things discs can do then any of the high speed drivers.its not sexy, but just like regular golf, you'll see your scores plummet more from becoming a better putter, rather than being able to throw 30' farther.
What do you do for headwind shots or long hyzers? Are you able to keep the TL from turning over? If my only driver was a TL here in the midwest I'd be screwed on windy days.Definitely agree with your general point though. I threw nothing but a viking (speed 9) off the tee for the first 18 months or so.
 
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playing for 2-3 years, most actively in the last 16months, and hit up over 20 courses in NC.

my bag looks like the following.

DX Aviar P&A (170ish)

Champ Aviar P&A (175ish)

DX Roc (175)

DX Roc (176)

Z Buzzz SS (178)

Cryztal Z Buzzz (176)

Star TL (167)

I don't throw anything over Speed 7 that's the TL. Can get any of the midrange out 300' or so. Can push the TL out 400' on a good day. (field distances)

Best advice I can give anyone who is just starting out... and assuming you want to get better... is to ditch all your high speed drivers. "omg its speed 13 that means i can throw it far", is only correct if you have the proper form and arm strength already to use it. Stick with a putter (doesn't matter which one, just the one that feels best) and either the Shark/Mako/Roc by Innova, or the Buzz by Discraft as your discs, again whichever feels better in your hand. After you can get the midrange consistently out to 200'+, pickup a leopard/teebird/gazelle/TL fairway driver. and don't get anything faster till you can get it out 300'+. Those discs specifically the putter and the midranges will teach you more about how to throw, good form, how to shape lines, and the various things discs can do then any of the high speed drivers.

its not sexy, but just like regular golf, you'll see your scores plummet more from becoming a better putter, rather than being able to throw 30' farther.
What do you do for headwind shots or long hyzers? Are you able to keep the TL from turning over? If my only driver was a TL here in the midwest I'd be screwed on windy days.Definitely agree with your general point though. I threw nothing but a viking (speed 9) off the tee for the first 18 months or so.
headwind... probably my cryztal z buzzz? In NC... 90% of our dg holes are moderately wooded, to very wooded. wind is only even potentially an issue on maybe 10% of our holes to begin with, and then its only an issue if its really windy. I don't tailor my bag for wind really. so good news, we don't have to worry about wind. bad news, base plastic gets eaten up from hitting all the trees.for long hyzers either the cryztal buzzz or the TL work fine. there's a hole at a local course thats 288 slightly uphill and requires a 25ish ft hyzer as brush comes out shortly after the tee to force that shot... i throw the crystal buzz there and usually end up with a 15-20ft putt for bird.

i haven't quite gotten to the point where my TL will really turnover. occasionally when I really rip into it well it will turnover slightly but not so much that it won't come back. If I ever get to the point where I'm throwing hard enough to do that consistently, I'll switch over to champ tbirds or move to something like the orc or starfire/SL.

 
playing for 2-3 years, most actively in the last 16months, and hit up over 20 courses in NC.

my bag looks like the following.

DX Aviar P&A (170ish)

Champ Aviar P&A (175ish)

DX Roc (175)

DX Roc (176)

Z Buzzz SS (178)

Cryztal Z Buzzz (176)

Star TL (167)

I don't throw anything over Speed 7 that's the TL. Can get any of the midrange out 300' or so. Can push the TL out 400' on a good day. (field distances)

Best advice I can give anyone who is just starting out... and assuming you want to get better... is to ditch all your high speed drivers. "omg its speed 13 that means i can throw it far", is only correct if you have the proper form and arm strength already to use it. Stick with a putter (doesn't matter which one, just the one that feels best) and either the Shark/Mako/Roc by Innova, or the Buzz by Discraft as your discs, again whichever feels better in your hand. After you can get the midrange consistently out to 200'+, pickup a leopard/teebird/gazelle/TL fairway driver. and don't get anything faster till you can get it out 300'+. Those discs specifically the putter and the midranges will teach you more about how to throw, good form, how to shape lines, and the various things discs can do then any of the high speed drivers.

its not sexy, but just like regular golf, you'll see your scores plummet more from becoming a better putter, rather than being able to throw 30' farther.
What do you do for headwind shots or long hyzers? Are you able to keep the TL from turning over? If my only driver was a TL here in the midwest I'd be screwed on windy days.Definitely agree with your general point though. I threw nothing but a viking (speed 9) off the tee for the first 18 months or so.
headwind... probably my cryztal z buzzz? In NC... 90% of our dg holes are moderately wooded, to very wooded. wind is only even potentially an issue on maybe 10% of our holes to begin with, and then its only an issue if its really windy. I don't tailor my bag for wind really. so good news, we don't have to worry about wind. bad news, base plastic gets eaten up from hitting all the trees.for long hyzers either the cryztal buzzz or the TL work fine. there's a hole at a local course thats 288 slightly uphill and requires a 25ish ft hyzer as brush comes out shortly after the tee to force that shot... i throw the crystal buzz there and usually end up with a 15-20ft putt for bird.

i haven't quite gotten to the point where my TL will really turnover. occasionally when I really rip into it well it will turnover slightly but not so much that it won't come back. If I ever get to the point where I'm throwing hard enough to do that consistently, I'll switch over to champ tbirds or move to something like the orc or starfire/SL.
FANTASTIC advice in this thread, anborn! :thumbup: I made the same mistake early on as you are saying to avoid...grabbing Speed 12-13 discs and letting 'er rip years before I was ready. What's been interesting with my game this year (so far) is that I'm having to re-learn all my discs after being a little over a year removed from abdominal surgery. Pre-surgery, I could use my abs/core to put a lot of torque on my tee shots, but post-surgery (for 6-9+ months), I couldn't do it at all. Was mostly arms/upper body. But I learned to put a lot more speed/snap on my release as I was ripping the disc across my chest. And now that I've got my abs/core 90-95% back? I'm turning over EVERYTHING. The Buzzz, the Katana...heck, I've even turned over a Boss and my Mako (about as "money" as a disc can get in my bag for doing the exact same thing every time I throw it). It's a little shocking to feel like I need to "slow things down" just a bit to keep the disc from turning over! But when I need all of 350-400 feet, it's the first time in my life where I feel like I know what I'm doing in getting that disc out of my hand with the proper form, screaming-fast.

While my tee shots are better than ever, I seemed to have lost my mojo/touch to my approach game now. HIGHLY frustrating! Shots I could park with my eyes closed I'm now leaving 20-25' away. Still gotta stick those putts! But I'd just as soon walk up to the basket and drop-in vs. have to think about the wind or ??? One of these years, I'm going to put all three aspects of my game together in the same round. I've tied/set course records with only two of three things working on a given evening...but get all three going at the same time? My gosh, that will make me feel like I'm about twenty feet tall. Boom the drive, park the approach, and/or consistently run the long deuce putts. Then I can die happy. :)

 
FWIW, my Mako is probably my new favorite disc Anbo. I haven't played in a couple weeks, but the times I have been out it has been money. It seems like it just goes where I want it. I seem to be able to grip it better than my Roc (it's got maybe a slightly thicker rim?) so it's much more consistent.

 
If there are any Nashville players, I'll be there on the 17th if you want to get a round in. I also see that anborn is in Raleigh- I'll be there on June 5th/6th if you're interested.

 
FANTASTIC advice in this thread, anborn! :thumbup:

While my tee shots are better than ever, I seemed to have lost my mojo/touch to my approach game now. HIGHLY frustrating! Shots I could park with my eyes closed I'm now leaving 20-25' away. <snip>
I have and am experiencing much the same thing right now. 2 years ago I almost only played the shortest course in the area mainly cause its also the most convenient. its basically a pitch/putt course you can play exclusively with a putter, or a putter and a mid. no hole over 300, and only 2 holes over 250. back in the day i would regularly shoot -4, with my personal record of -8. After moving away from that course and playing mostly other longer courses, and going from throwing 220-230 to adding 100ft to my drives... i went and started playing back there. first two rounds there? +6 and +7. unreal. touch of the mid/short game was gone. it took 6-7 rounds to rediscover negative numbers there.I think it comes from (re)learning the timing of your throw when powering down. its a different feel than letting em rip. so you used to throw 230' at 90%-100%. but now you hit 230' at 60%. so once you learn the mechanics of longer throws, it forces you to almost relearn the mechanics of mid-range touch at the same time. that and you start throwing your putter alot more for approaches. at least that's my theory.

 
FWIW, my Mako is probably my new favorite disc Anbo. I haven't played in a couple weeks, but the times I have been out it has been money. It seems like it just goes where I want it. I seem to be able to grip it better than my Roc (it's got maybe a slightly thicker rim?) so it's much more consistent.
+1. finding a disc that fits your game that you develop a comfort level with is a great feeling. i've never picked up a mako, i've only heard good things about it.
 
If there are any Nashville players, I'll be there on the 17th if you want to get a round in. I also see that anborn is in Raleigh- I'll be there on June 5th/6th if you're interested.
after work on the 6th i'm available. drop me a pm if ya want to get a round in.
 
Can anyone comment on any of these? I'm interested in giving this a go around DC and Bluemont would definitely be the most convenient, but I get the impression it might not be the best layout?

Bluemont Park Arlington, VA

6 miles

McLean Central Park McLean, VA

11 miles

Giles Run @ Laurel Hill Park Lorton, VA

12 miles

Marshmallow Mountain McLean, VA

14 miles

Burke Lake Park Fairfax Station, VA

15 miles

Calvert Road Park College Park, MD

15 miles

 
Played 2 rounds at D.F. Buchmiller park in Lancaster today. Didn't keep score the first round but shot +5 the second round. Had a foursome. There are always a ton of people at that park cooking out, playing whiffle ball, playing football at that park. The only problem is, they don't seem to realize when they set up their field in the fairway of a disc golf hole. Oh well, it was still fun.

My friends and I have been playing that course a lot lately. It isn't as tight as Pinchot, but it's not completely wide open like Red Land. A good mix of different types of holes, with some elevation changes, long and short holes. Weather was awesome too.

 
I got my ### kicked last Tuesday playing both 18s at la Mirada. It paid off when I kicked Kit Carson's ### on Wednesday. Then I went out and did an hour of practice drives on Friday. Arm is still sore. Should be good for a Wednesday round though.

Also, got my Blizzrd in the mail and really love it. Wish I could try a few different types without having to commit to buy any though. Got a 150. Kind of want to try the 134s...

 
Got my second Ace ever on the same hole in a different pin position. Hole #2 GG Disc Golf Course, C Pin Position. That's zero Aces since 1995, then two in month. Crazy

Threw a Buzz on a tight hyzer line. Playing with two dudes. Both gave me $5.

:cling:

 
FANTASTIC advice in this thread, anborn! :thumbup:

While my tee shots are better than ever, I seemed to have lost my mojo/touch to my approach game now. HIGHLY frustrating! Shots I could park with my eyes closed I'm now leaving 20-25' away. <snip>
I have and am experiencing much the same thing right now. 2 years ago I almost only played the shortest course in the area mainly cause its also the most convenient. its basically a pitch/putt course you can play exclusively with a putter, or a putter and a mid. no hole over 300, and only 2 holes over 250. back in the day i would regularly shoot -4, with my personal record of -8. After moving away from that course and playing mostly other longer courses, and going from throwing 220-230 to adding 100ft to my drives... i went and started playing back there. first two rounds there? +6 and +7. unreal. touch of the mid/short game was gone. it took 6-7 rounds to rediscover negative numbers there.I think it comes from (re)learning the timing of your throw when powering down. its a different feel than letting em rip. so you used to throw 230' at 90%-100%. but now you hit 230' at 60%. so once you learn the mechanics of longer throws, it forces you to almost relearn the mechanics of mid-range touch at the same time. that and you start throwing your putter alot more for approaches. at least that's my theory.
Hey anborn!My approach "mojo" seems to be coming back...thank goodness! I think for me, the trick was forcibly keeping my head down about a half-second longer on my release. I think once I started missing some approaches this Spring, it "snowballed" on me because I was looking up a bit sooner after my release to see if I threw it properly or not. That bit of quickly looking up screwed with my form. But when I hit the reset button, slowed my release down a bit, and forced myself to keep my head down even longer than I used to, everything came back into alignment. ~80% of my approaches landing within 20' of the basket from 175' and in...which leads to a one-putt about 90% of the time when my putting is on like it should be.

I was telling my buddy last night how interesting it is that I feel like I'm playing great at the moment, but I still can't get within more than 1-2 shots of my low-rounds from 2011. Granted, I had a significant surgery last Fall. But I should be healed from that now. And for whatever reason, if I could hang a -5 on a course last year, a -3 feels like a great round this year.

When I thought about it though (and "dialed in" a bit more), I did better. I told him I was sick of this crap of being a couple shots off 2011, so on a course where my personal best is -6 (2011), I told myself I was going to match it. Opened with a 40-foot deuce putt (350' hole), then a 20' deuce on #2. Missed a 30-footer on 3 for deuce, then missed a 45-footer on 4 for deuce. Went 2, 4 (ugh), 3, 2, 2 for a -4 round. Still not a -6, but I was a hair-better tee shots or putts on holes 3 and 4 from tying that high-mark. Even with a bogey! My low-round for the year on that course...and I felt like if we would have had enough daylight, I was "getting in my zone." Which I haven't felt since about a year ago.

I think I've been limiting myself (competitively) because I've just been happy to play again after being laid up for months following surgery. But I need to go from being happy just to be there to mentally making those courses my #####. :P I need to re-locate that ~90 days of zen I had going last Summer...when I was tearing up courses and setting/tying course records that had stood for 15+ years. That was the closest thing I've ever felt to "arriving" on the disc golf scene...playing ~935-945 rated rounds as a 40 year-old.

 
Can anyone comment on any of these? I'm interested in giving this a go around DC and Bluemont would definitely be the most convenient, but I get the impression it might not be the best layout? Bluemont Park Arlington, VA 6 miles McLean Central Park McLean, VA 11 miles Giles Run @ Laurel Hill Park Lorton, VA 12 miles Marshmallow Mountain McLean, VA 14 miles Burke Lake Park Fairfax Station, VA 15 miles Calvert Road Park College Park, MD 15 miles
I guess no one in here plays in that area. You'll have to let us know how those courses are. I would love to get some rounds in when I'm back visiting family. Play them all before I get back and tell me which ones are worth it. TIA.
 
Got my second Ace ever on the same hole in a different pin position. Hole #2 GG Disc Golf Course, C Pin Position. That's zero Aces since 1995, then two in month. CrazyThrew a Buzz on a tight hyzer line. Playing with two dudes. Both gave me $5. :cling:
Dude! :excited: :thumbup:
 
Went to the park to work on my drives. I have 12 drivers :bag: and two mids (Buzz and Aurora). My mids were besting most of my drivers.

 
Went to the park to work on my drives. I have 12 drivers :bag: and two mids (Buzz and Aurora). My mids were besting most of my drivers.
One thing I have learned is that less power and better form produce longer distance. My guess is you are trying to throw you drivers too hard or you are not delivering enough snap/spin to release a drive on plane. You are probably not trying to throw your mids as hard and they are released correctly therefor max distance.I have started throwing my mids way more than I ever used to and getting longer distances than I used to with my old drivers. I think I am relearning the game the way it was meant to be played. Focus on snap more than arm speed.
 
There is a course nearby called Creekside in Camp Hill, PA. I really like the course but it is right along the Conodoguinet creek. So far I've thrown 2 discs in the creek. I left one go. I got the other one out and got soaked up to my sac in the process while wearing jeans and boots. I had the 'yanks' that day and was just yankin to the right on my drives and sailed one in the creek. I've almost lost a few others. I really like the course but it is just too risky. I doubt I'll be playing there much.
I lost a pink zWasp in the creek on hole 12 @ Creekside on April 20th... 2011. I got the most random emails about that disc yesterday. I find this whole thing both bizarre and hilarious at the same time.First Email:

Subject: I have your frisbee!

From: Sky

To: Me

It is currently on a cross country post-grad rock climbing trip being used as a plate. This is your mid-range driver in a Colorado parking lot! Link to photo: http://goo.gl/Tr18N
Second Email:
Subject: I have your frisbee: #2

From: Sky

To: Me

Me and your mid ranger driver are in New Mexico enjoying the view and heading towards Texas! link to photo #2: http://goo.gl/hXgcw
Third Email:

Subject: #3

From: Sky

To: me

Me and the plate/frisbee are replacing a broken water bottle and faulty (SCARY!) belay devices in Dallas, TX today! Link to Photo #3: http://goo.gl/088tM
This is fun!I congratulated her, wished her well on her trip, and asked for more photos... I wonder if I will get my disc back at some point?!?

 
you wrote your email address on the bottom of the disc?

Last night I found a disc in the woods. Guy wrote his name on it but no contact info :confused:

 
Can anyone comment on any of these? I'm interested in giving this a go around DC and Bluemont would definitely be the most convenient, but I get the impression it might not be the best layout? Bluemont Park Arlington, VA 6 miles McLean Central Park McLean, VA 11 miles Giles Run @ Laurel Hill Park Lorton, VA 12 miles Marshmallow Mountain McLean, VA 14 miles Burke Lake Park Fairfax Station, VA 15 miles Calvert Road Park College Park, MD 15 miles
I hit Bluemont a couple times a week as its my local course that I can walk to in about 10 minutes. While convenient it is definitely not the best layout and is a short course and despite having 3 tee boxes per hole its not all that challenging.Giles Run in Lorton is tough. Two tee boxes per hole and two pin placements - Red/White. Have extra discs ready cause there are patches of rose/thorn bushes where if your disc goes in there, even if you can see it, you may not be able to get it back. I've seen people with machetes out there.I think both parks in McLean are only nine holes. Burke Lake is the course I played growing up. Not all that challenging and annoying because the course isn't separated from the rest of the park so you have Mom, Dad, and little Ricky walking up fairways, etc.You should check out Seneca Creek State Park in Gaithersburg, MD. Really not that far from DC/MD/VA. 27 hole course with 2 tee boxes per hole. After each 9 it dumps you out near the parking lot so you can refill drinks/rest/etc. Will cost you $3.00 per person in car if you are out of state.http://www.dgcoursereview.com/course.php?id=192
 
I'm getting pretty jealous of you hole in one guys. Tossed my Super Stupid Soft putter on a hole about 170ft today and it went into the basket (didn't touch a chain) and bounced out the other side. About the 6th or 7th time I have either hit the basket/chains in 4 years of playing. :rant:

 

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