Can you putt with a different ball




















I got the idea from a bottle with water and oil in it sitting on my desk. I like to turn it upside down and watch it. So I thought if I put it in a clear balloon it would have the same effect. Well it was really cool, but I had colored the water with tie dye, and when the balloon popped, the oil and tie dye got everywhere and made a huge mess.

This entry was posted in Words and tagged chia seeds , floam , how to make a stress ball , ultimate list , water beads , what to put in a stress ball. You are commenting using your WordPress. You are commenting using your Google account. You are commenting using your Twitter account.

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email. Flour Flour is the typical thing to put in stress balls. Water Beads Water beads are super fun to put in balloons. Fake Snow Fake snow, or instant snow as it is often called, feels kind of like warm snow. Chia Seeds Chia seeds are pretty easy to get into a balloon with a funnel, and pretty fun. Epsom Salt, Salt, Sand, and Cocoa They all feel about the same, but you can make the salts different colors.

Are golfers only allowed to use a putter on the putting green? Or, when the golf ball is on the putting green , can a golfer use any club he or she wants to play the stroke? Can you, for example, play a chip shot from the putting surface? The Rules of Golf allow the use of any golf club to play any golf shot.

If you want, you can tee off using a putter and putt using a driver. That would not be a very smart way to play golf, but it would be perfectly legal under the Rules of Golf. Sometimes a golfer's best option—sometimes the golfer's only option—is to use a club other than the putter when on the putting green. That's not often the case, but it does happen. For example, if your putter breaks during a round and you are unable to replace it, you'll have to putt using something other than the putter.

In that situation, many pros prefer to "putt" with a wedge, striking the golf ball at its equator with the leading edge of the wedge blading it, in other words. Another scenario you occasionally rarely see on the pro tours: a green with severe slopes and an odd shape, where the break on a long putt is so great that the golfer would have to putt through the fringe or even into the rough in order to play the proper break. In that situation, the tour players may opt to use a wedge and chip or pitch the ball, taking much of that break out of the equation.

And once upon a time, the Rules of Golf includes something called stymies that required chipping on the green. Stymies existed only in match play and allowed one golfer to intentionally putt his ball into another player's line, blocking the other golfer's direct access to the hole.

In that situation, the blocked golfer often chipped over the intervening ball. Stymies were eliminated from golf in Measure content performance. Develop and improve products. List of Partners vendors. Brent Kelley. Brent Kelley is an award-winning sports journalist and golf expert with over 30 years in print and online journalism. Updated April 21, What Is an 'Outside Influence' in Golf? And Aren't.

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