Jeasy13
Par Member
I skipped pages 6-10 so this may have been said, but I don't think anything is holding the sport back. My local course sits in a public park with soccer and softball fields, playgrounds, pavilions, fishing ponds, and some very nice walking/biking trails. AT LEAST once every round I'm approached by someone who was at the park enjoying one of the non dg related features of the park asking about disc golf, saying how much fun it looks, asking about the discs, etc. I try and let each and every curious passerby throw a few and encourage them to join me for the rest of the round( who really throws all 20 discs they carry?). 9 times out of 10 the said person just became a casual disc golfer, and they pass that on to their friends and family. You want the sport to grow? Be an ambassador to the sport... Educate the noobs and try and help their game. Answer questions. Nobody is going tonwant to play a sport that is VERY difficult to master when the top players are d***s.