Swango1980
Well-known member
Not necessarily, not if the hole is playing uphill from your positionThe reference point is nearer the hole - basic trigonometry......but I get your point!
Not necessarily, not if the hole is playing uphill from your positionThe reference point is nearer the hole - basic trigonometry......but I get your point!
Agreed, when the situation could surely be avoided by course management marking the bunker as GUR.
I guess the lesson of the story is, avoid the bunkers, especially when waterlogged, as some of them effectively become penalty areas rather than bunkers.Where I play (probably the same situation for most clubs) the only people out on the course early enough to make such decision would be greenstaff and it is not their job to set rules of play.
Play starts at 7.30 am and the manager does not start that early and I doubt if any committee member are around at that time.
Where I play there are around 50 bunkers. Just imagine how much time it would take to go out and inspect every bunker to make a decision about individual bunkers and the cost to a club of having sufficient GUR notices in the first place.
All our green staff have been instructed on recognising the condition of a 'wet' bunker and report possible issues to the course manager or his deputy. They have the authority to mark with blue flags. The LR is permanent.Where I play (probably the same situation for most clubs) the only people out on the course early enough to make such decision would be greenstaff and it is not their job to set rules of play.
Play starts at 7.30 am and the manager does not start that early and I doubt if any committee member are around at that time.
Where I play there are around 50 bunkers. Just imagine how much time it would take to go out and inspect every bunker to make a decision about individual bunkers and the cost to a club of having sufficient GUR notices in the first place.
Where I play (probably the same situation for most clubs) the only people out on the course early enough to make such decision would be greenstaff and it is not their job to set rules of play.
Play starts at 7.30 am and the manager does not start that early and I doubt if any committee member are around at that time.
Where I play there are around 50 bunkers. Just imagine how much time it would take to go out and inspect every bunker to make a decision about individual bunkers and the cost to a club of having sufficient GUR notices in the first place.
So the head greenkeeper doesn't mark areas considered as GUR ? He has to await clearance from the General Manager or Committee ?
I think you are slightly confused (probably by some of the language in previous posts).Thinking about this from a fairness point of view, and disenthralling ourselves from the need to defend the status quo, why would it not be acceptable, when most if not all bunkers are full of water ( for the few days that happens), for the course manager to make a decision that all bunkers are out of play and you can drop outside without penalty ( inline with POE )
I know that the present rules say different. But the R &A could have taken the recent opportunity to allow that in their rule changes.
Why defend the present position, which clearly is unfair.
Because under normal circumstances, if you go in a bunker you can play a shot without penalty. If it is flooded, your next shot is taken but a penalty shot is added.
It is not the same as going into a pond or lake penalty area( from which you are clearly not meant to be able to play a shot )
It is not your fault that the bunker is flooded 😀
I think you are slightly confused (probably by some of the language in previous posts).
There is nothing in the rules of golf to prevent the actions you put forward.
Nothing.
The handicap authorities have taken the view that a course rated on the basis of its 'hazards' should not have those hazards removed and still be used to administer handicapping - pretty reasonable, even blindingly obvious, for me.
Nothing in The Rules prevents this, but that's a different part of Golf to Handicapping administration!It seems I am not so much confused as ignorant of the rules regarding flooded bunkers.
on my course there are quite a lot of bunkers, and a few very large ones.
This year the rain has been somewhat constant and so many bunkers have been full of water( I reckon you could swim in some of them!😀)
The course prides itself on not closing, so there have recently been days when what I had referred to about "bunkers out of play" would have been the fair thing to do.
But I thought the present rule prevented such a situation being possible: that all the bunkers couldn't be ruled out "en bloc".
...
Can and does happen! Turns competition into 'non-qualifier', as does a significantly shortened course....
I'd be grateful if you could spell out when this could happen, I.e., can it be so ruled for competition purposes. Your last para suggests that because of handicaps it can't be . Can club competitions be run which don't affect handicaps?
TIA