I wish I had the Weather Flow Wind Meter unit the last time I golfed in Scotland. Those numbers would have been crazy. The Weather Flow Wind Meter is a very small portable turbine which plugs into your smartphone or tablet (iPhone, iPad, Android) and via several different free applications can show you all sorts of data regarding the wind in your location.
Data
The Wind Meter shows some great data which can be very useful on the golf course or doing other outdoor activities. I use the unit for golf, and for checking current wind conditions when flying my remote control aerial photo/video helicopters. Other applications might include flying, sailing, fishing, windsurfing, and more.
Here are the primary data values shown:
The data can then be processed by the user, or even shared with other users.
The unit can read in meters/second, miles/hour, knots, kilometers/hour, & beaufort scale.
On The Course
This device is great for information gathering before a stipulated round or tournament round. It is not legal to use such a device during said rounds. Knowing wind speed and one’s one game allows the golfer to compensate and choose the proper club when hitting against or with the wind.
After feeling the winds and seeing the actual numbers, a golfer can get a much better idea of wind speed without having to use the unit all the time, therefore having a better idea how to play shots in stipulated rounds or tournaments.
Conclusion
The Weather Flow Wind Meter is a fun and useful $34.95 investment which can help golfers or those who need to know wind conditions in order to perform their best, and be armed with the most complete information they can.
I’ll admit it. I can be bought. Send me a golf product with a Utah Utes logo on it and you are guaranteed airtime.
I’m doing a hat review today. Yes some very hard-hitting, groundbreaking golf journalism. Today’s hat is the new Bridgestone Golf collegiate team logo hat. Bridgestone Golf has been offering college logo golf balls for a while and these hats make a great match.
These adjustable hats are made from 100% washed cotton twill so they’re very comfortable and have a nice relaxed fit. The college team logo (preferably a Utes logo) is embroidered in a 3D effect which looks great. The side of the cap features a Bridgestone Golf logo for those of us who like to show our team colors and our golf colors at the same time.
There are currently 29 teams available for the Bridgestone Collegiate Caps: Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Auburn, Boise State, Clemson, Connecticut, Florida, Florida State, Georgia, Kansas, Louisville, Louisiana State, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oregon State, Penn State, South Carolina, Stanford, Tennessee, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, Utah, Virginia Tech, West Virginia, Wisconsin.
Retail price on these hats is $30.
Conclusion
College logo hats are a great addition and possible new revenue for golf shops in college towns. My local pro-shop sells the hell out of Utah hats which are made by another golf company. Now they can offer another selection from Bridgestone Golf and you can be sure I’ll be letting the merchandise manager know about them!
WITB – Tony Korologos 2014 River Oaks Club Champion
Are 14 Clubs Really Necessary?
The last two times I’ve played golf in Scotland I’ve realized that over there a few clubs are simply not necessary. First, the lob wedge. The ground is SO hard that hitting the lob is very difficult. The hard ground and wind really call for low running shots. In six days of golf at 36 holes per day, I hit my lob wedge twice and both times it was the wrong choice. The next time I play true links golf over there I’m bringing a pencil bag and maybe 8-10 clubs.
At home I could easily take out a club or two without missing them. I hit my 3-fairway no more than 1-2 times per round. In yesterday’s league round I didn’t hit it at all. I could easily take out the 5-iron or one long iron. I could take out one of my four wedges, probably the gap wedge.
4-Club Tournament
As club president of my league for many years, we would do a yearly 4-club tournament. This is a tournament where the players were only allowed, you guessed it, four clubs. I usually picked a hybrid, 7-iron, sand wedge, and putter or some setup similar.
At the conclusion of the tournament I would notice the scores and something very interesting. The scores were most often the same. A 12 handicap player who normally shot 84-85 with 14 clubs shot 84-85 with four clubs. I noticed the same for my own scores. Not much different.
15 Clubs
My weekly money game is a fun competition between low single digit handicappers. We usually play with 14 clubs, but if someone wants to test a driver or putter we don’t have a problem with them having 15 clubs in the bag. In the end, it makes virtually no difference in the scores, or who wins the money.
Marketing
The folks at Golfplan posted a discussion about the 14 club limit and whether or not it is too much. Perhaps we can use less clubs and still shoot the same scores and enjoy the game just as much. But golf equipment companies would not be too hip on that. In fact, I bet they’d rather see a 20 club limit or perhaps no limit at all. Anything to sell more clubs.
Clubbing Based On Location and Conditions
I usually have the same 14 clubs in the bag at all times. I’m used to them and used to the setup. PGA Tour pros change clubs for nearly every event. Phil Mickelson used two drivers in the Masters Tournament a few years ago. And tour pros have many different wedge configurations, or even have their wedges custom bent or ground to specs which are best for the course and conditions they are playing that week.
I was thumbing through the newspaper at lunch today. For those who don’t know, a newspaper is a big piece of paper with news printed on it. I haven’t read a horoscope in years, but happened onto it so I checked mine (Libra).
“A problem is likely to occur when you become too immersed in an issue.”
Woa. I couldn’t help thinking they were talking about my short game. Perhaps I’m over thinking my short game? Too immersed? Maybe I should relax and let it flow, rather than being so hyper focused on it?
I decided I should check out the other horoscopes and that’s when I realized that this set from Jacqueline Bigar was 90% usable for the golf world if I just used the last sentence of each one. My golf interjections are in (parentheses).
Aries
As the day goes on, you might need some time to tackle a problem (with your putting).
Taurus
Act quickly and ask questions (to your golf instructor).
Gemini
You might feel confused (because this damn game is hard!).
Cancer
You’ll have the energy and right attitude to get past any problems (with your greens in regulation).
Leo
You will have no choice but to deal with the issue (of the yips).
Virgo
You might decide to go out on your own (for nine more holes).
Libra
A problem is likely to occur when you become too immersed in an issue (like your short game).
Scorpio
Your ability to see past the obvious defines a situation. (No way around it. You are a hack)
Sagittarius
Stop resisting, and be open to the process. (Tiger Woods…. “its a process’).
Capricorn
Consider your options, and decide not to fight what the majority wants. (Get in the skins game you pussy!)
Aquarius
You might decide that you have had enough and head in a different direction. (Time to take up bowling as a hobby)
Pisces
Your caring toward a loved one won’t go unnoticed. (Said the golf gods. Thanks SO much for replacing your divots, raking the bunkers, and fixing your ball marks!)
“Drive for show. Putt for dough, son.”
When I started this blog back in 2004 it was entirely for my love of the game. HOG was intended to be and still is a great outlet for commentary on everything from golf course architecture to equipment to solving the shanks.
As the blog grew the overhead grew with it. Overhead would be hosting expenses, travel expenses (PGA Merchandise Show etc), and so on. I was actually kicked off many shared servers because the site sucked up all the bandwidth. As a result, I had to get my own dedicated server which is considerably more expensive. Because of operational costs like the dedicated server, I started taking on ads to offset the costs.
Despite the site’s visitors and readers increasing every year since it began, ad revenue has dropped, big. I’m talking 80-90%. Why? Part of the reason is the decline in the golf industry, but a large reason is Google. Google changes their search algorithms and/or policies and that has a big effect on ad revenue. One type of ad may become taboo, like text links. Text links used to be a nice revenue source for a few years. Recently however, I’ve actually had golf companies who paid for months or years in advance email and ask to have their links removed because changes in Google’s algo means those links hurt them more then helping them.
The net result is that I’ve cancelled all text link ads. Google ads are still producing, but at 1/10 of what they did two years ago. As a single, independent blogger without the budget or SEO team large golf sites have, I can’t spend all my time trying to figure out the latest change in advertising and search algorithms.
I’ve thought of cancelling all ads entirely but that would mean I’d be operating in a hole. Well, I should say more of a hole.
Over the years I’ve declined hundreds of requests for online casino or gambling ads. I’ve also declined paid post types of ads. I still receive many requests for these types of ads and can’t help thinking that my Google revenue is nearly worthless as it is so why not try them for a time and see what happens?
So I pose these questions:
I have every intention of keeping HOG up and running for many years to come. An activity which takes up so much of my time which could be spent with my family or actually playing golf should cover its own costs and hopefully produce some fruit. The golf gods know I’ve been sewing seeds for years.