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Interesting.
About the only thing I can say that's true pretty much across the board, is that tie-dye discs are consistently among the hardest to find.
This is the second reason I got a backup Eternal Jackalope a month or so ago. I knew autumn had arrived and did not want to risk losing my beloved beat in purple one. Got a hot pink one. As far as throwing it on more leafy courses, so far so good!from my personal experience (especially when other people throw this color) purple is a horrible solid color to try to find after throwing even compared solid black.
nothing will beat tie dye but for solid colors I've had problems so many times when my cardmates and friends throw their dang purple discs.
for some reason purple will even disappear when landing flat on green grass that's a litter taller. purple has the uncanny ability to just mix in surrounding stuff.
To continue, my cart will only have white, pink or orange, not counting my black puffy Wizards. Unfortunately that usually minimizes (if we can get online stores and manufacturers to know the difference between pink and purple) my options, especially when I factor in the weight options. I am okay with that, like I really need more (think I may finally be under a thousand) discs.I refer to tye-dye as camouflage...
Colors used for tye-dye doesn't really matter, the irregular patterns do more harm than good.
Good for you. Maybe it is easy where you are, but I avoid blue and black. I want pink, orange, red and in the summer even green discs stand out in drought stricken Texas.I had mentioned before how blue is good but that I tend to find a lot of blue beer cans in the woods, thinking they might be a blue disc. Someone, can't remember and don't care to, got into a back and forth about how the cans I said I was finding were only from a specific era and that I was essentially wrong in my observation. It was pretty dumb. So this is my roundabout way of saying blue doesn't occur in nature, but beer cans that are blue end up there. Thanks for reading.
My favorite colors in for playing in the woods are light blue and hot pink. I'd tell you to avoid deep, dark colors like black, navy, maroon, deep purple.
While I'm personally not a fan of yellow in general, it can actually be pretty easy to spot on shadowy wooded courses, that don't have a lot of foliage on the ground. But if there's a lot of vegetation at ground level, yellow is the toughest color for me to spot in vegetation.
That said, people's perception of color can differ. Think bright and high contrast compared to the courses and conditions you frequent.