Not too bothered where rakes are placed as long as the bunker has one. All I ask.
My club stipulates that 'rakes should be placed in the middle of bunkers pointing towards the flag'. Now whether you or I agree with that directive or not is completely irrelevant - at my place their IS a correct place for a rake.
And as you play your round you make a conscious effort to ensure they are as requested and any that are not, you stop and put them right, and we wonder why there are issues with slow play!!
Some places are considerate enough to have stands for the rakes, which makes them less likely to interfere with the ball.
I've got nothing against following the clubs preference for where a rake should be left and can't understand why everyone is having a go at SILH, must be the lack of on-course time.
It would never occur to me to move that rake, unless my ball went in that bunker I don't think the bunker would even enter my mind.
It would never occur to me to move that rake, unless my ball went in that bunker I don't think the bunker would even enter my mind.
You are kidding? - no seriously - if you saw it you'd just leave it there?
Maybe you'd find it worthwhile having a quick look into bunkers in passing - just in case someone ahead of you had left a rake positioned like this - and move it as a courtesy to the players behind you,.
Yes, firstly I don't think I'd notice it unless my ball went in there/I walked right past it, and even if I did it wouldn't occur to me to move it - I've just re-read the 4 pages of "Etiquette & Good Practice", that is in our club diary, and it makes no mention of where to place rakes, it says to enter a bunker on the low side & ensure you rake fully, but no instructions on where to leave the rake.
Whether your club has advice or not - I am frankly astonished at your thoughts on this. And that just because the club guidance doesn't tell you about rake positioning you wouldn't bother. Sorry - I am baffled as to why it wouldn't occur to you to move it.
I am frankly astonished at your thoughts on this.
It's just never been something that has been taught to me, or I have read or picked up - to me rakes are part of the game and sometimes you get lucky breaks off them, and sometimes you get bad breaks off them - rub of the green.
If there is a local rule/guidance on how to leave them, I will follow it after I have used one, but otherwise I tend to just leave it in what I consider is a sensible place, especially if it is a large bunker with a number of rakes.
I am sure you agree that the rake in my photo is not in a sensible place - but you said you'd not think about moving it. That's what baffles me.
And off 10 you must have played with hundreds of different players - and you have never noticed anyone reposition a rake. I also don't get why you think this needs teaching - it is surely blindingly obvious that your ball could sneak into that bunker and get trapped against the back edge (the green is to the right of the pic) with no shot whatsoever. Yes - rub of the green and all that - but we don't want any of our fellows to suffer that sort of bad luck - brought about through someone else's stupidity or carelessness.
I will put a rake that is half in half out of the bunker, back into it at my club. I will put the rake in a better place having used it having played out of one of our bunkers, but I don't go round examining other bunkers for badly positioned ones. I see badly raked bunkers all the time. Should I be going into these bunkers and rake them ? Where do you stop being a golfer and become a greenkeeper ?
I will put a rake that is half in half out of the bunker, back into it at my club. I will put the rake in a better place having used it having played out of one of our bunkers, but I don't go round examining other bunkers for badly positioned ones. I see badly raked bunkers all the time. Should I be going into these bunkers and rake them ? Where do you stop being a golfer and become a greenkeeper ?
Great point, now if I notice an unraked bunker, I will rake it, but again it would have to be because my ball was in it, or I walk right past it - if I was in the middle of the fairway I wouldn't be checking them to see if they had been raked.