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Crandall Park disc golf reported popular by park beneficiary committee
, 2023-01-08 18:00:00,
GLENS FALLS — The disc golf course at Crandall Park has been used substantially in the past year, according to the 2022 annual report issued by Jaimen Hume.
Hume is a professional disc golfer who designed the course with Jon Hotmer in November 2020. Hume is also a member of the disc golf course subcommittee and supplied the statistics of course usage to the Crandall Park Beautification Committee via email.
The popularity of the course has been measured by the smartphone app Udisc. It helps disc golfers keep track of scorekeeping, statistics and allows for discovery of new courses.App developers told Hume that the rounds played that are logged using the app accounted for about 20% of rounds, or plays, on the course.
“Crandall Park finished out the year at 5,605 plays, up from 4,063 last year, on Udisc. The app developers guess that 20% of players use the app, so that number is theoretically at 28,025 plays! That’s an astounding number and a ton of usage of the park,” Hume said in an email.
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Grant to boost marketing Bedford County as disc golf destination | State and Regional News
, 2022-09-03 09:15:00,
BEDFORD — With five public courses, Bedford County is no stranger to disc golf.
Now, capitalizing on the sport’s growing popularity and local tourism campaign, “Destination Bedford Disc Golf,” a $19,500 grant from the Virginia Tourism Corporation to support marketing efforts will help promote the county as a disc golf destination.
“Disc golf in general, in this area, especially Bedford County, has skyrocketed,” said Kenny Palmer, parks and recreation operations coordinator for Bedford County. “Disc golf is, at the moment, by far the most participated-in amenity at our parks. That includes the trail systems, too. Our trails get used quite a bit, but disc golf definitely outnumbers trail users.”
Over the past several years, Bedford County has continually worked to maintain, improve, or expand disc golf courses as a driving tourism attraction, drawing visitors and professional or hobby disc golf players from far and wide. Bedford’s five courses are managed by the county’s parks and recreation department.
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“For this particular application, I chose Destination Bedford Disc Golf as the marketing program because people are coming from across the country to play the courses here,” said Nicole Johnson, director of tourism in Bedford County, via email. “The tourism department started promoting disc golf in 2019 with the roll-out of the Destination Bedford branding and marketing campaign. Now I want to take it a step further. I not only want to generate more awareness of the courses here, but also encourage those who come for disc golf to stay longer and discover other activities and attractions.”
When applying for a Virginia tourism grant, Johnson said, the applicant must have a specific project in mind. The grant money will fund email, print, digital, social media, broadcast television and radio advertising for Destination Bedford Disc Golf.
Part of the draw of disc golf is that it is an outdoor activity, accessible to most everyone, and an activity not negatively impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, Palmer said.
Whereas many venues and events were shut down or limited,…
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Grant to boost marketing Bedford County as disc golf destination | Local News
, 2022-09-03 09:15:00,
With five public courses, Bedford County is no stranger to disc golf.
Now, capitalizing on the sport’s growing popularity and local tourism campaign, “Destination Bedford Disc Golf,” a $19,500 grant from the Virginia Tourism Corporation to support marketing efforts will help promote the county as a disc golf destination.
“Disc golf in general, in this area, especially Bedford County, has skyrocketed,” said Kenny Palmer, parks and recreation operations coordinator for Bedford County. “Disc golf is, at the moment, by far the most participated-in amenity at our parks. That includes the trail systems, too. Our trails get used quite a bit, but disc golf definitely outnumbers trail users.”
Over the past several years, Bedford County has continually worked to maintain, improve, or expand disc golf courses as a driving tourism attraction, drawing visitors and professional or hobby disc golf players from far and wide. Bedford’s five courses are managed by the county’s parks and recreation department.
People are also reading…
“For this particular application, I chose Destination Bedford Disc Golf as the marketing program because people are coming from across the country to play the courses here,” said Nicole Johnson, director of tourism in Bedford County, via email. “The tourism department started promoting disc golf in 2019 with the roll-out of the Destination Bedford branding and marketing campaign. Now I want to take it a step further. I not only want to generate more awareness of the courses here, but also encourage those who come for disc golf to stay longer and discover other activities and attractions.”
When applying for a Virginia tourism grant, Johnson said, the applicant must have a specific project in mind. The grant money will fund email, print, digital, social media, broadcast television and radio advertising for Destination Bedford Disc Golf.
Part of the draw of disc golf is that it is an outdoor activity, accessible to most everyone, and an activity not negatively impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, Palmer said.
Whereas many venues and events were shut down or limited, particularly indoor ones, disc golf in the open air lent itself perfectly as something to…
,
To read the original article, go to Click here
Pro disc golfers hold panel on eve of tournament | Gaz
Three of the world’s top professional disc golfers sat down for a panel at the Emporia County Club Tuesday night ahead of the first round of the professional tournament at the Dynamic Discs Open today.
Paul McBeth, Eagle McMahon and Hailey King answered questions submitted from all over the country and asked by moderator Terry Miller, better known by his Youtube moniker “thediscgolfguy.”
McMahon, a 23-year-old from Boulder, Colo., who is considered one of the most popular players in the world, said it felt nice to be back in Emporia because it’s unique among disc golf cities.
“Emporia stands out because the whole town welcomes us. There’s no other place that I’ve been to where it’s quite the same as Emporia,” he said.
Miller, whose Youtube account has more than 64,000 subscribers, agreed that Emporia is a special community for disc golfers and fans alike.
“Coming to Emporia, everybody feels like a big deal here, right?” he said. “I mean, every placard and billboard sign, the streets are lined, saying, ‘Welcome, disc golfers.’ I think it’s pretty exciting for all of us to see and experience.”
The four rounds of the Dynamic Discs Open will be held at Jones Park’s Gold Course Wednesda – Saturday.
King, who is 19 and hails from West Bend, Wis., only practiced at Jones Gold once, preferring instead to spend her time in Emporia prior to the tournament relaxing.
“I got here Wednesday but … I just wasn’t wanting to throw a frisbee,” she said. “I just wanted to sit and watch movies all day so I did that. … It’s not that tough of a course.”
McBeth has played professionally since 2008 and is considered by some to be one of the best disc golfers in history, perhaps evidenced by the 10-year $10 million deal he signed with Discraft in February. He said that Jones Gold is an attackable course but that there are a few holes he will be looking out for.
“Hole one is definitely a tough one. You can double bogey if not triple that first hole and that’s not going to get you where you want,” said the 30-year-old from Huntington Beach, Calif. “And the last hole is pretty tough as well. But yeah, it’s a very attackable course.”
McMahon agreed with McBeth, saying that holes one and 18 were the trickiest. He also expects that weather could be a key contributor to how each player goes about each round.
“[Jones Gold] plays not as hard as any other course we play on tour, so it’s all about just picking your spots,” he said. “Tomorrow is going to be potentially rainy and windy, so that might play a factor. But for the most part, I’m going out and trying to attack the whole course.”
King said she was far more nervous about speaking on the panel Tuesday night than she was about teeing off Wednesday morning.
“I don’t really get nervous the night before. It’s like an hour before my tee time [that I start to get nervous], but then I’m able to settle it down before I tee off,” she said.
McBeth felt like he had spent enough time practicing the course that he is well-prepared, but admitted that in the morning he might start to feel a bit more anxiety.
“I don’t get nervous the night before to where I can’t sleep,” he said. “ … Today, I’m pretty calm, prepared, but tomorrow as the time gets closer, you get into warm-up, you want to get into that zone. That’s usually when I start to feel the nerves. … It’s more so nervous about how my preparation was more than anything.”
The first round of the professional tournament teed of Wednesday at 7 a.m. McMahon said that, after the Dynamic Discs Open (then the Glass Blown Open) was canceled last year due to COVID-19, being back in Emporia is a return to normalcy.
“Disc golf feels like it’s really back now,” he said. “That’s the cool thing. There’s going to be about 1,000 fans out here, so really looking forward to that. Looking forward to playing. I love the four-round tournament. Those feel like it just makes the whole event bigger, so I’m excited. Thanks, Emporia.”
Disc golfers enjoy sport during finale of the Prodigy Star Series | Local News
When Mike Robbins was introduced to disc golf by a cousin more than two decades ago, “it was love at first sight.”
“You get outside, and you can play for little or no cost,” Robbins said. “We love it.”
Disc golf can be “very zen, when you have a great throw, or when you see someone else with a great throw,” said Chattanooga’s Mark Cole, who began playing in 2003. “Everyone cheers one another on, and we all like to see everyone play well.”
The camaraderie is tremendous, Cole added.
“I’ve traveled all over the East to play and see friends.”
Cole has also passed down his love of disc golf to his son James, an even better disc golfer than himself.
James is “exceptional, world-class,” Robbins said. He’s earned the nickname “Snappy,” because when he throws his discs, “you hear that perfect snap.”
Disc golf is “a low-impact sport,” which is critical for Ringgold’s Josh Henderson now that “I’m in my 40s,” he said. It doesn’t punish his body, and “I’m good at it — better at this than anything else I’ve played.”
Cole, Henderson and Robbins were among approximately 140 disc golfers competing in the pro division of the finale of the Prodigy Star Series, hosted by Prodigy Disc — a Dalton-based manufacturer of disc golf discs and other equipment — Saturday at Edwards Park. The amateur division played Saturday at Westside Park.
Players qualified for the finale by performing well in prior events, said Rome’s Brandon Morgan, whose son Tait was playing at Edwards Park. Tait has been playing since age 8, and “there’s no real limit to how much you can play.”
Though the conditions were cool and cloudy, that didn’t bother competitors, Robbins said.
“This is an all-weather sport — except for lightning — and no rain and no wind (equals) good conditions.”
Robbins plays the disc golf courses at Edwards Park and Westside Park regularly, he said.
“They are both elite courses.”
Cole appreciates the design of the Edwards Park course, as it places a premium on accuracy, rather than distance, he said.
“I’m in my 60s, and I can’t throw it as far as a lot of other (players).”
Henderson also comes to Edwards Park “often,” he said. “It’s one of the best in the area.”
Whitfield County also has a disc golf course at Heritage Point Park in Dalton and a nine-hole course at the Tunnel Hill Golf Club, Brandon Morgan said.
“This is a good part of the world to be in if you like disc golf.”
The festivities concluded with an afternoon concert at the Burr Performing Arts Park in downtown Dalton by The Whole Fam Damily, a Dalton-based band.
Edwards Park, Westside Park to host major disc golf tournament April 16, with concert afterward at Burr Park | Local News
Dalton-area residents can see some of the best disc golfers in North America compete on Saturday, April 16, at the courses at the Whitfield County Parks and Recreation Department’s Edwards Park and Westside Park.
The tournament is the finale of the Prodigy Star Series, hosted by Prodigy Disc, a Dalton-based manufacturer of disc golf discs and other equipment.
“We have hosted an event each month for the past six months,” said Will Schusterick, co-owner of Prodigy Disc, a former No. 1 disc golf player in the world and three-time winner of the U.S. Open.
“The tournament round will start at 10 a.m.,” he said. “We are more than happy to have anyone come out and watch. There are separate divisions. Westside will have the amateurs, and Edwards will have the pro division.”
Matt Zollitsch, event coordinator for Prodigy Disc, said the series has had more than 700 competitors from the United States and Canada.
“The series has brought sponsors from all over the disc golf world,” he said.
The tournament will conclude at 2 p.m. with a concert at the Burr Performing Arts Park in downtown Dalton by The Whole Fam Damily, a Dalton-based band.
“We’ll have live music, disc golf vendors,” said Schusterick. “It will be a fun atmosphere, and we welcome everyone to come out and take part.”
According to Sports Illustrated, disc golf was one of the few sports that thrived during the COVID-19 pandemic, “likely partially due to its ability to be played outdoors and socially distanced. But it was also the continuation of a growth trend that occurred through the 2010s.”
The magazine reported that the Professional Disc Golf Association now has 150,000 members, “with 70,000 of those retaining active status for tournaments — a figure that’s doubled since 2016.”
The Whitfield County Parks and Recreation Department’s Westside Park Disc Golf Course was voted one of the top four courses in the United States in 2020 by the readers of Connect Magazine. It finished behind Maple Hill Disc Golf in Leicester, Massachusetts; Quaker’s Challenge at Gifford Pinchot State Park, Lewisberry, Pennsylvania; and Blue Ribbon Pines, East Bethel, Minnesota.
“We see people from out of town daily playing these courses,” said Whitfield County Parks and Recreation Department Director Brian Chastain.
In addition to the courses at Edwards Park and Westside Park, which were designed by Schusterick, there is a disc golf course at Heritage Point Park in Dalton and a nine-hole course at the Tunnel Hill Golf Club. There are also two practice baskets on the grassy area next to the train tracks at the old freight depot off Morris Street in Dalton.
Get into the swing of spring at local golf courses | Sports
In the spring, one’s fancy turns to thoughts of golf.
English poet Alfred Lord Tennyson might not have been very long off the tee or deadly on a putting green. But if he were here today, he might be writing about the love that abounds for the sport that involves chasing a little (and usually white) ball.
With spring bringing more nice days to Polk County, interest in hitting the links is starting to increase.
And, when the Masters returns April 7-10 in Augusta, Georgia, golf fever tends to rise even higher.
A couple of local courses already are noticing an upturn in players.
“When we had that first nice day a week or so ago, we were packed most of the day,” said Tim Tarpley, owner of Cross Creek Golf Course.
“Winter play was a little slow,” said Bill Mulholland, pro shop manager at Dallas Golf Club, “but the last two weeks, with the weather drying out, we’ve been basically full every day.”
And Oak Knoll Golf Course, which closed in the winter, was hoping to re-open for public play very soon, “probably this week if it dries out,” co-owner Scott Hicks said.
Many courses in Oregon and elsewhere have experienced a climb in play during the past two years, when the pandemic limited opportunities for sports, exercise and more. Golf was one activity that still could be played, either solo or with friends, as it could be done while social distancing.
Assuming that COVID-19 doesn’t surge again, area courses will see this spring and summer if the momentum in their business continues.
The pandemic “increased our play probably 20 percent,” Mulholland said.
“We’ve changed every way we run the business,” Tarpley said, adding that Cross Creek had to add to its fleet of golf carts and schedule extra workers.
“The number of rounds have gone way, way up,” Tarpley said. “We had a lot of new customers.”
The new clientele even translated into more golf cart accidents, he noted.
“We used to get one every five years. Now we’re getting two or three a year,” he said.
Golfers were more likely to brave the elements during the pandemic, Mulholland said.
“When the weather’s nice and then it isn’t so nice, people often say, ‘We can’t golf in that,’” he said. “But in Oregon, if you don’t golf in the rain, you don’t golf.”
Dallas Golf Club’s nine-hole, par-31 course, which opened in 1990, opens for play at 7:30 a.m. The last tee time is 5 p.m. The layout measures about 1,815 yards, and the facility has pitching and putting greens and a driving range, although the range is “in rough shape,” Mulholland said, because freezing temperatures brought down “most of the nets.” The owner, Wilson Golf Enterprises, is debating whether to replace the nets or use that land for RV parking, he added.
Cross Creek has 18 holes that can stretch to 6,918 yards, with a par of 72. Tim and Kathee Tarpley bought the property in 1996, then built the course and opened nine holes in May 1998. The driving range and new clubhouse came in 2003. The back nine opened in 2005.
The course has rolling hills, mostly wide fairways, some sand and Cross Creek, which golfers must cross on Nos. 1, 8, 10, 11 and 18 (twice on the par-5 finishing hole).
“We get golfers from other courses” during inclement months, Tim Tarpley said, “because we have a lot of good drainage.”
Cross Creek also has a practice putting green and clubhouse with limited menu, including sandwiches and hot dogs.
Cross Creek opens at 6:30 a.m.
Scott Hicks and co-owner/wife Karla are in their fifth year at Oak Knoll. The course has been around for nearly 100 years, and Scott Hicks said the big change for the start of this season is that the front nine will “go back to the original, 1926 nine holes.”
That includes the interesting, 115-yard fifth hole, which has “probably the smallest green in the state,” he said, a surface that is about 15 feet wide and 20 feet long.
The fifth hasn’t played this way since the late 1980s, he said.
Once the grounds dry out further, the back nine will open, giving Oak Knoll golfers 18 holes at about 5,876 yards from the white tees, at a par-72.
The course will be open from 7 a.m. till dark.
Oak Knoll has a driving range and putting green, and the food service for golfers will feature a unique drive-through concessions through wide, garage doors on each side of the pro shop. The doors will allow players to pull in and get something to eat or drink between nines. As of last week, Oak Knoll was waiting to get the doors that will open the pro shop to the patio, Karla Hicks said.
The on-site restaurant is being used only for events, including weddings and parties. The state of work and employment is a factor in that, the Hicks said. “It’s really hard to get good help,” Scott Hicks said.
Karla Hicks said the goal for golfers at Oak Knoll is that they have a good time and have the time to learn and enjoy the game.
“We want it to be a place where a new player can come out and have fun,” she said. “We’re a little different than a lot of courses these days. We tell players to not feel stressed and to take their time, let others play through and don’t feel in a hurry. We want you to actually learn to play. It’s an experience, not just a golf game.”
Oak Knoll also has become known for a different type of golf – disc golf. The disc golf course there gets year-round play and tournament action during the more peak months.
“Disc golfers are here rain or shine,” Karla Hicks said.
Disc golf can be played on the golf course when it is closed to golf, and “in summer the play changes to outside of the course so the two aren’t overlapping,” she said.
Tyler hosting national tour and Texas State Disc Golf Championships | News
Hotels have been packed and the City of Tyler has been bustling as the 2021 PDGA Texas State Championships kicks off the Professional Disc Golf Association tour.
Professionals and amateurs from all over the nation arrived earlier this week to start two days of practice at the Dogwood Course at Lindsey Park.
Disc golf is like regular golf, except the disc looks like a Frisbee. The sport has been around since 1970, but has increased in popularity with the Disc Golf Network and players with sponsors and even their own trading cards.
The top professional men started the three-day tournament this morning and the women start around 2:30 p.m. They are looking to finish in the top 10 today and advance into the elite card. All golfers will be seeded after today’s round.
One of the top female disc golfers in the nation, Ohn Scoggins of Los Angeles, recently won a tune up for the national tour, the 2021 Memorial FPO.
She has been impressed with Tyler and the course.
“I really love the course because in California, we don’t have as many trees. It’s beautiful and the city and the people are very nice, friendly and wish us luck,” said Scoggins. “Everything has been perfect. And the weather is nice, so we love it.”
VIDEO with Steven Storrie, tournament director in Tyler and Local Pro John Willis from the Disc Golf Pro Tour YouTube page:
With close to 200,000 members in 54 countries, disc golf is taking off. There are over 8,000 courses nationwide and several in Tyler and Longview.
The last two years, we have had a big number of people playing and our membership is close to 200,000,” said Scoggins. “When Covid happened, people wondered what sport they could play and they tried this sport. We have no many new faces and memberships.”
Scoggins started playing for fun 10 years ago and turned the hobby into a professional career.
“I just played for fun. I had no idea I would be here today. Disc golf is crazy. It takes time to like it and when you like it, it’s additive and so much fun,” Scoggins said. “You will see so many throw long, some throw short, backhand, rollers … it’s so addictive. I can not stop. Plus I like to play sports that are outside.”
With the difficulty of the course in Tyler, Scoggins could be in for a five-hour round of disc golf today. The players have media obligations and there are several areas to buy merchandise.
“It feels good when people recognize me. People ask me to sign a picture and it makes me very proud,” Scoggins said. “I’ve been playing for many years and worked very hard to get into the top 10 of all the women in the sport. Finally, my hard work has paid off. People are recognizing me. “
Disc golf provides outlet for community, brings players together | News
ENID, Okla. — Several years ago, Chad Nech was looking for an activity to lead a healthier lifestyle.
He caught the “disc golf bug” in 2016 and began traveling to various disc golf courses throughout Oklahoma and in Kansas and Texas to play in tournaments.
Then, Nech formed Enid Disc Golf Club and became a tournament director for Professional Disc Golf Association so he could organize and run events.
Nine disc golfers competed in the first tournament Nech ran in Enid. There were about 80 players in the most recent tournament.
“I wanted a community, so I built it,” he said. “Disc golf is just this inclusive thing that’s bringing all of these different people from all walks of life together.”
By 2017, EDCG was running tournaments and fundraisers, giving money back to nonprofits in the Enid area and helping fund additional courses and holes, such as the NWOSU-NOC Disc Golf Course and the 18-hole Meadowlake Disc Golf Course.
EDGC has grown in membership, reaching nearly 50 now, with the COVID-19 pandemic leading to an “explosion” in membership.
“(Disc golf) has given us an outlet in a time when we need it,” Nech said. “One thing I started to see — especially in 2020 — is that people just needed a good time.”
The cost to become an EDGC member is $50. Disc golfers who are interested in playing with EDGC get a free “First Flight.”
The 2022 season begins on Feb. 20 and will last for 10 to 11 months, depending on the weather. EDGC offers both sanctioned and non-sanctioned leagues, and players are awarded 1.5 points for every player they tie with or beat.
EDGC’s winter indoor putting league, which started on Jan. 9, will continue from 4-6 p.m. on Feb. 20 and 27 at Enid Axe and costs $5. Mulligans Over Meadowlake will begin at 11 a.m. on March 6 and costs $60 per team, with all of the proceeds benefiting Forgotten Ministries’ Youth Program, The Bridge.
Nech said the support from the community since 2016 has been great, adding he wants to keep seeing the sport grow in popularity, especially targeting youth.
“I definitely want to … focus on the next generation, because we obviously can’t hold the torch forever,” Nech said.
For more information on disc golf or to get involved with EDGC, visit Enid Disc Golf on Facebook or join the EDGC Facebook Group.
More information also can be found at Flight Farm, 1012 Hite Boulevard, which sells discs and other disc golf items and is open from 2-6 p.m. Monday-Saturday.