I am.
Is this your first time trying the game?
I've been playing for 35 years. Best advice I can give you just starting out is go see a teaching pro at a local course. Most offer some kind of beginner teaching package, usually around$100. Honestly, the type/ brand of club or ball isn't really going to matter for awhile. Go to the range or better yet a par 3 course if there's one nearby. Have fun, don't watch the golf channel, read too many magazines or read too many books. Keep it simple. Too many ideas in your head at once can really mess you up. It's a great game you can play anywhere so just have fun with it.
But a couple of good books to start you out are the fundamentals of Hogan, and Dave Pelz short game and putting bibles. Driving the ball 300 yards is fun(when it's straight) but learn to be good inside 100 yards and on the green and you'll learn to score well.
Good advice. Keep it simple until you understand why things happen (in your swing).
Find a good teacher to give you the basics then practice practice practice.
Love golf, hate my slice on drives.
Love golf and actually enjoy it more now that I am not so concerned about my handicap. Pre kids I was a 12 and always consumed with getting better. Now, I go out randomly and have a much better time because I don't care.
It's an addictive game. In some ways it's like bb'ing when it comes to the mental aspect. It's takes a lot of discipline and dedication. I went from a 18 HC to +1 currently. Took 10 years to do it. Lol
It's weird. Only there on about half, my baseball/softball swing coming out
But a couple of good books to start you out are the fundamentals of Hogan, and Dave Pelz short game and putting bibles. Driving the ball 300 yards is fun(when it's straight) but learn to be good inside 100 yards and on the green and you'll learn to score well.
Quite an accomplishment being a scratch golfer. I'm a 7 handicap myself and I've been playing a long time. Although I spent a long time(and allot of money on equipment) trying to play the shots the pros do, now I play within my own strengths and score allot better. And it's allot more fun.
Quite an accomplishment being a scratch golfer. I'm a 7 handicap myself and I've been playing a long time. Although I spent a long time(and allot of money on equipment) trying to play the shots the pros do, now I play within my own strengths and score allot better. And it's allot more fun.