Muddy trouser bottoms

Shakey

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Anyone else find that it's only the bottom of their trouser legs that get muddy during a round?

Just wondering if anyone knows if gators (if that's the word) are made that protect trouser bottoms.

I've tried eBay and Googling 'gators' , but got some very iffy and distracting results!

If no one makes these, Dragons' Den here I come!!
 
My golfing partner recently got the top of his trousers pretty muddy when he slipped down a wet bank, so it's not just the bottom of your trousers you need to worry about :)
 
don't do it, my old man sports a gaiter on the course .......................he looks like a knob :D

you want to favour a plus 2 or 4 with the appropriate stockings

either that or buy a washing machine :thup:
 
Anyone else find that it's only the bottom of their trouser legs that get muddy during a round?

Just wondering if anyone knows if gators (if that's the word) are made that protect trouser bottoms.

I've tried eBay and Googling 'gators' , but got some very iffy and distracting results!

If no one makes these, Dragons' Den here I come!!

Plus 4's or 2's old boy, those are what you want;)
 
don't do it, my old man sports a gaiter on the course .......................he looks like a knob :D

you want to favour a plus 2 or 4 with the appropriate stockings

either that or buy a washing machine :thup:

Yeah, they do go straight in the wash after a round and they're only cheapie Sports Direct efforts (do the job fine though).

It's just that I sometimes go elsewhere after golf, and caked trousers bottoms isn't the best look (like some kind of 'dirty protest' as Alan Partridge might say)!!
 
Yeah, they do go straight in the wash after a round and they're only cheapie Sports Direct efforts (do the job fine though).

It's just that I sometimes go elsewhere after golf, and caked trousers bottoms isn't the best look (like some kind of 'dirty protest' as Alan Partridge might say)!!

For this reason I keep a spare pair of trews in the locker at the club and change if the ones I have on the course get muddy. If they don't then great - means the spares will be there for the next time. Only bugger with that is that if you use the spares and forget to replace them, it's inevitable that you will get muddy the next time out.
 
For this reason I keep a spare pair of trews in the locker at the club and change if the ones I have on the course get muddy. If they don't then great - means the spares will be there for the next time. Only bugger with that is that if you use the spares and forget to replace them, it's inevitable that you will get muddy the next time out.

Cheers, Greg, but I'm not in a club yet and tend to go straight from my motor to the course. And no one would want to see my rear end struggling into a clean pair of trews after a round - trust me!!
 
Cheers, Greg, but I'm not in a club yet and tend to go straight from my motor to the course. And no one would want to see my rear end struggling into a clean pair of trews after a round - trust me!!

go in the clubhouse, have a drink, use the facilities, you may like it!:thup:
 
don't do it, my old man sports a gaiter on the course .......................he looks like a knob :D

you want to favour a plus 2 or 4 with the appropriate stockings

either that or buy a washing machine :thup:


To paraphrase Dr Who... Gaiters are cool! :p

If you don't mind having sweaty calves at the end of a round then standard gaiters will do. Breathable (goretex) gaiters are pricey, £30-50.
You might be better off getting some waterproof trousers if your course is so muddy that it splashes up to your ar...mpit!
 
A pair of shorts perhaps....

though you have choose between a wet trouser bottom or frozen family jewels...
 
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