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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
All you need is reasonable evidence that the ball is lost in the hazard, and the point where the ball last crossed the margin of the hazard. Take your 2 clublengths from that point, drop and play on with one penalty stroke added for the privilege of extracting yourself from the hazard.
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Rick Driver - Mizuno MX560 9.5° 3W - Mizuno F60 15° 4W - Mizuno F60 16.5° 22° - 25° TM Rescue hybrid 6I - PW King Cobra 3400I/XH GW - King Cobra - 50° SW - Cleveland CG 11 56° 58° Callaway X Tour wedge Putter - USS Enterprise NCC 1701 (Golfsmith component) Bushnell Pinseeker Tour V2 11.1 USGA Index Home Course - Foothills Golf Course, Colorado |
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
So if you saw it fly in there, that's more than 'reasonable'.
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Regards, -Bulls9999 ---------------------------------------------- Ping 'Anser' putter w/Jumbo Tiger Shark grip TaylorMade r7 425cc 10.5° driver w/ReAx 65 (Reg) Callaway X-3W (15°, Fujikura 26.3 TP, Stiff) Titleist 52°, 56°, 60° Vokey-256 wedges TM 3- and 4- Dual Rescue Hybrids Callaway X-20 Tour (Precision X flighted, 5.5 flex) Titleist ProV1 & Callaway HX Tour Titleist X66 Stand Bag HDCP = 14.9 |
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
Ooh...good point. I think we all presumed it was a 'hazard', but it may not be.
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Regards, -Bulls9999 ---------------------------------------------- Ping 'Anser' putter w/Jumbo Tiger Shark grip TaylorMade r7 425cc 10.5° driver w/ReAx 65 (Reg) Callaway X-3W (15°, Fujikura 26.3 TP, Stiff) Titleist 52°, 56°, 60° Vokey-256 wedges TM 3- and 4- Dual Rescue Hybrids Callaway X-20 Tour (Precision X flighted, 5.5 flex) Titleist ProV1 & Callaway HX Tour Titleist X66 Stand Bag HDCP = 14.9 |
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
A water hazard is defined in the rules. If it does not meet that definition it is not a water hazard no matter how it is marked. In this case he indicated there may be water in the ravine and it may be properly marked, but the question is whether the ravine is a "water course" like a stream or ditch or such.
Many courses mark difficult areas as lateral water hazards hazards to speed up play and players can play as if it is, but the rules do not permit such markings. See dec 33-8/35. |
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
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__________________
Some mornings it just doesn't seem worth it to gnaw through the leather straps.
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
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__________________
Rick Driver - Mizuno MX560 9.5° 3W - Mizuno F60 15° 4W - Mizuno F60 16.5° 22° - 25° TM Rescue hybrid 6I - PW King Cobra 3400I/XH GW - King Cobra - 50° SW - Cleveland CG 11 56° 58° Callaway X Tour wedge Putter - USS Enterprise NCC 1701 (Golfsmith component) Bushnell Pinseeker Tour V2 11.1 USGA Index Home Course - Foothills Golf Course, Colorado |
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
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But is a ravine a watercourse? Although some ravines were formed by erosion of running water the ravine is not a "flowing body of water" as a river creek etc. The colorado river is a watercourse and the grand canyon a ravine it created, but along the banks of the canyon are thousands of ravines that are not watercourses, they are simply carved out by erosion and may from time to time in rainy weather fill with water. There is a course near Jacksonville Florida called Ravines and it is covered with steep-sided gullys and ravines not one of which is a watercourse. (But I suspect most of which are marked as water hazards.) It might be a tough call in a given case but I don't think we can say a ravine is a water course simply because it may have water in it from time to time. It actually has to be a watercourse. One online dictionary says this: 1. a stream of water, as a river or brook. 2. the bed of a stream that flows only seasonally. 3. a natural channel conveying water. 4. a channel or canal made for the conveyance of water. |
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
The defintiion of a water hazard does also say "and anything of a similar nature", which I feel leaves the door wide open to a fairly liberal interpretation.
It seems to me, and I may have a faulty memory of it, but I think the "barancas" on the Torrey Pines South Course are designated as hazards, and they are simply ravines formed by storm runoff flowing to the ocean.
__________________
Rick Driver - Mizuno MX560 9.5° 3W - Mizuno F60 15° 4W - Mizuno F60 16.5° 22° - 25° TM Rescue hybrid 6I - PW King Cobra 3400I/XH GW - King Cobra - 50° SW - Cleveland CG 11 56° 58° Callaway X Tour wedge Putter - USS Enterprise NCC 1701 (Golfsmith component) Bushnell Pinseeker Tour V2 11.1 USGA Index Home Course - Foothills Golf Course, Colorado |
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
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Yes, there is room for more than the listed items, but I would be careful of a liberal interpretation. The area in question still must be a water course. I don't know about Torry Pines either, but we should be careful making broad applications of single situations. It may be that those are water courses, or there is a local rule approved by the USGA. |
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
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That being said, I was at the Wachovia yesterday and saw a lot of "red" paint on the ground in areas didn't appear to be what I'd call a true water hazard.....or at least not since "the big flood" (read "Ark")....as a matter of fact it was on "high ground" not low lying area.
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
Of course, there is none. If an area is not a watercourse it cannot be designated a water hazard or a lateral water hazard. Calling it a "lateral hazard" has no meaning within the rules of golf.
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
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I guess I am not following the debate here....If as in the question posed, there is a ravine with red stakes, its a lateral water hazard...period. I don't get what is being questioned. If it is within the marked hazard, it is played that way, whether or not the ball actually made it to the water that may or may not be at the bottom of the ravine.... Maybe I am just missing my morning coffee.... |
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Re: Lateral Hazard rules question
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A water hazard has to be a watercourse. A ravine may be a watercourse. That is a matter of fact to determine. But the mere fact that it is marked as a lateral water hazard, does not make it a water course. Thousands of courses mark difficult areas as lateral water hazards to speed play, they say. However that mistake is not the player's and they are entitled to play them as marked. But the rules do not permit such markings. |