brettricewku
Birdie Member
The more weight comes from the flight plate of the disc being exposed while pulling through. For this physics problem, you can't neglect wind resistance.
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I gotta take a break 81 holes in 3 days - my arm is a little sore LOL
36 Beaver Dam
Doooood. PM me when you're going to play. I'll hit up Crystal Lake anytime I'm not at work! Always nice to play with friendly faces.
#1 is always a disappointment as I'm not 100% warm yet and don't feel like throwing another 15 minutes to warm up. Normally a 3
#8 is my 2nd hardest hole after #5. I try too hard after the 2 easy holes before it. I seem to ram a disc into the hill under that tree.
#17 is always a 4 even though I've bounced the disc off the basket a few times. I'm surprised how many times people park at the bottom of 17 and watch.
I gotta take a break 81 holes in 3 days - my arm is a little sore LOL
36 Beaver Dam
27 Tokan Creek
18 Heistand Park (why is it called Radar Hill??)
BTW - getting longer slowly . . .until my arm feels like it will fall off.
My Leopards (especially my light 153g) are awesome rollers when I newbie anhyser forehand and yesterday I accidentally had a fantastic roller uphill which got me thinking I should really utilize this shot more often . . . ON PURPOSE!!
Radar Hill - I sort of thought that but being almost a lifetime resident I had never heard that before.
#8 I seem to make it half way up the hill (stop laughing), then approach is level with the basket on the right and par. All of those uphills I brain cramp and throw too low. I think I concentrate too much, get tight and over think. When I walk up and just throw nice and loose I do much better on most throws (with my foot planted of course).
I think it's a free style thing.
I've started throwing rollers on uphill, especially with low trees to deal with. I'll probably never birdie this way, but I'm making par more consistently on those holes now.