Nope, I have one that sat out overnight in dew then in sun and it feels the same.
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Played doubles tonight, and everybody had a blizzard disc or three in their bag. I had a chance to throw a few, and while they were fun, I don't think that I quite have the distance for them yet.
Played doubles tonight, and everybody had a blizzard disc or three in their bag. I had a chance to throw a few, and while they were fun, I don't think that I quite have the distance for them yet.
I typically throw max weight only; every disc in my bag is 174g+ right now. What range would you guys recommend for a Blizzard Boss? I really want to try them out and check the hype, but can't afford to buy several different weights. Should I go to the extreme and buy a low 130s, or keep with my trend and by a max weight of Blizzard, like high 150s?
Looking for flat blizzard bosses!
Flatten them yourself. i flattened my wraith and got rid of like a half inch of dome. Didnt take any pressure.
So my questions is... Look at what technology in club and ball improvements have done to most of the existing ball courses in the USA. Most older courses are now obsolete because everyone is hitting 300 yard drives then a pitching wedge – or chipping on to the green - to a par 4.
If the disc technology keeps making these huge leaps forward... How many disc golf courses are going to be obsolete?
Is this a "good" thing for disc golf right now?
i play at a course a lot that you can easily shoot under par with a putter. fun, but not real challenging.This has already happened over the years. Have you ever played a course that was designed more than 20 years ago? At those times, your max distance wasn't anywhere near what it is today.
How did you do that?
I heard flipping the disc upside down and putting hot water on it will help, is that what you did?
So my questions is... Look at what technology in club and ball improvements have done to most of the existing ball courses in the USA. Most older courses are now obsolete because everyone is hitting 300 yard drives then a pitching wedge – or chipping on to the green - to a par 4.
If the disc technology keeps making these huge leaps forward... How many disc golf courses are going to be obsolete?
Is this a "good" thing for disc golf right now?