Jump to content
Testers Wanted! Titleist SM10 and Stix Golf Clubs ×

SteelHeel

Member
  • Posts

    2
  • Joined

  • Last visited

About SteelHeel

  • Birthday April 16

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Charlotte, NC
  • Interests
    Golf and Golf Travel and Golf
  • Referred By:
    Read an ESPN.com article about MGS

Player Profile

  • Handicap
    3.5

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

SteelHeel's Achievements

  1. The real moral of the story is that if you use a tour operator, just like any business, they make money on margin. 40-50% margin. If you don't mind calling hotels, requesting tee times, coordinating with transportation companies (I highly recommend you don't self drive), it is WAY cheaper to go it alone. Mix in some off the beaten path courses as well to keep costs reasonable. You can even get Old Course times if you do your research and request when the online ballot opens, so don't believe the operator's pitch about having exclusive access anywhere, that's not true. So a $4,000 golf trip through an operator can probably be done for $2,500-$2,800 (not including airfare), but there are many hours involved and the planning process should start a year in advance if going in high season. If it's worth 1500 or so per person to have everything taken care of for you, then by all means use an operator and sit back and enjoy.
  2. I play the ProV1x in the spring/summer/fall and move to the regular ProV in the winter as it's slightly softer. Both are a little shorter in the cold temps, but the extra clothing layers and denser air have as much to do with that as much as the ball. I just like the consistency inside 100 yards and chipping/putting. Since I hit less GIR's in the winter, I'm really relying on short game control to score in wintertime.
×
×
  • Create New...