Been waiting all day long for somebody to start a thread about #4 at Dolese Youth Park, Oklahoma City, because this is one of the two (count them) holes in the entire universe that I have ACEd, and I wanted to say a thing or two.
The reason I stood around waiting with my e-thumb up my e-butt, instead of doing something about it myself, of course, is that I'm basically very lazy. But almost the whole day has now gone past and nobody has stepped up, so here goes.
Number 4 at Dolese is a pretty short hole, one tee, two pin positions, neither visible from the box. The short position sits at the top of a 15-foot-tall manmade "hill", which has been reinforced against erosion with railroad ties. The "long" position is about 25 feet further from the tee.
The only obstacle is that big old hairy bunch of trees and bushes, which sits right in the way of a straight shot. You can choose the annie line around the left side or the hyzer line around the right side, either of which should put you at the pin.
Of course, roll-aways and bounce-aways are common, so your second shot (assuming the pin in the short) is typically anywhere from 10 feet out (at a 40-degree angle up) to 50 feet out and slightly uphill.
How I did it: 172-gram yellow CE Teebird. I'd throw it again except the dang thing's on my wall
Now somebody else go fetch some pictures - I've written my (more or less) thousand words
The reason I stood around waiting with my e-thumb up my e-butt, instead of doing something about it myself, of course, is that I'm basically very lazy. But almost the whole day has now gone past and nobody has stepped up, so here goes.
Number 4 at Dolese is a pretty short hole, one tee, two pin positions, neither visible from the box. The short position sits at the top of a 15-foot-tall manmade "hill", which has been reinforced against erosion with railroad ties. The "long" position is about 25 feet further from the tee.
The only obstacle is that big old hairy bunch of trees and bushes, which sits right in the way of a straight shot. You can choose the annie line around the left side or the hyzer line around the right side, either of which should put you at the pin.
Of course, roll-aways and bounce-aways are common, so your second shot (assuming the pin in the short) is typically anywhere from 10 feet out (at a 40-degree angle up) to 50 feet out and slightly uphill.
How I did it: 172-gram yellow CE Teebird. I'd throw it again except the dang thing's on my wall
Now somebody else go fetch some pictures - I've written my (more or less) thousand words