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-   -   At Cuscowilla (http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=7731)

airair 10-28-2010 08:32 AM

At Cuscowilla
 
I just want to tell you guys that I'm now at Cuscowilla, taking lessons from Yoda. And enjoying the hard work. I'll tell more about my stay when I come home to my winter country.

Daryl 10-28-2010 09:34 AM

Wow. :smiley2304:

Here's wishing you the best. :occasion:

KevCarter 10-28-2010 09:51 AM

That's great news. Can't wait to hear more!!!

Kevin

BerntR 10-28-2010 10:13 AM

Good for you Airair,

You're doing the right thing.

Remember to take it as a compliment when your playing partners call you a sand bagger next spring.

innercityteacher 10-28-2010 12:26 PM

Nice! Ask him what he recommends in terms of clubs!
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by BerntR (Post 77778)
Good for you Airair,

You're doing the right thing.

Remember to take it as a compliment when your playing partners call you a sand bagger next spring.

Please? And I'm making my reservations, stasera!

Congratulations!


ICT

airair 10-28-2010 12:26 PM

Thx. A wonderful experience and I think I am getting rid a lot of my bad habbits and motions and learning new ones that are much more reliable, says Air, who is on a lunch break before session nr 2 today.

Etzwane 10-28-2010 04:24 PM

wow ! Enjoy !

Amen Corner 10-28-2010 05:35 PM

Greit!! Hoppas du ha de moro

12 piece bucket 10-28-2010 08:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Amen Corner (Post 77795)
Greit!! Hoppas du ha de moro

Spaghetti . . . .

BerntR 10-28-2010 09:26 PM

Bøtta!

Det er svensk!

airair 10-29-2010 08:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Amen Corner (Post 77795)
Greit!! Hoppas du ha de moro

Kanskje ikke morsomt er det rette ordet, men givende, inspirende, motiverende, grundig, instruktivt og hardt arbeid paa en meningsfylt maate og alt sammen i en hjelpsom og vennlig atmosfaere...

airair 10-29-2010 08:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BerntR (Post 77778)
Good for you Airair,

You're doing the right thing.

Remember to take it as a compliment when your playing partners call you a sand bagger next spring.

What's a sand bagger? Is that a good thing?

KevCarter 10-29-2010 08:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by airair (Post 77823)
What's a sand bagger? Is that a good thing?

In your case, your scores will be going down faster than your handicap, and you will be winning all the bets! You probably will feel guilty, just like our friend City, and won't be able to sleep at night. :laughing9

Kevin

airair 10-29-2010 08:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by KevCarter (Post 77824)
In your case, your scores will be going down faster than your handicap, and you will be winning all the bets! You probably will feel guilty, just like our friend City, and won't be able to sleep at night. :laughing9

Kevin

I do forsee some / a lot of improvements (they have already appeared). The big task is to keep all this intact and build on it during a LONG winter, so my old bad habbits don't ever dear to reappear!!

BerntR 10-29-2010 09:02 AM

A sand bagger is a player that uses various tricks to keep his handicap significantly higher than his scoring ability. Like having a couple of deliberate quadruples on 17 and 18 since there's a tournament coming up in a few days. Like "forgetting" to register friendly games that brings the handicap down. This way the sandbagger stays "competitive" in handicap tournaments.

At worst it is cheating and at best it is cheating *just* a couple of strokes.

In a tournament in our club here in TX earlier this year, the winner posted net scores of 56 and 60. That's sandbagging of the worst kind. I was mildly shocked when he even got a price for putting up such scores. In Norway he would have been kicked out of the tournament after the first round and probably been reported to the national golf association as well.

If you play really well and have true progress people may still call you a sand bagger, but usually with a smile on their face then.

innercityteacher 10-29-2010 07:15 PM

OK, so what have you been shown so far?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by BerntR (Post 77827)
A sand bagger is a player that uses various tricks to keep his handicap significantly higher than his scoring ability. Like having a couple of deliberate quadruples on 17 and 18 since there's a tournament coming up in a few days. Like "forgetting" to register friendly games that brings the handicap down. This way the sandbagger stays "competitive" in handicap tournaments.

At worst it is cheating and at best it is cheating *just* a couple of strokes.

In a tournament in our club here in TX earlier this year, the winner posted net scores of 56 and 60. That's sandbagging of the worst kind. I was mildly shocked when he even got a price for putting up such scores. In Norway he would have been kicked out of the tournament after the first round and probably been reported to the national golf association as well.

If you play really well and have true progress people may still call you a sand bagger, but usually with a smile on their face then.

And what have you "apprenended," or what has been genuine insight for you? Details, young man!

ICT

BerntR 10-30-2010 08:20 AM

airair,

Did you just jump on a plane across the Atlantic or did you have a work journy to the states that shortened trip to Cuscowilla. In any case, you got balls man.

ICT,

Not sure what you're asking about here.

airair 10-30-2010 09:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BerntR (Post 77849)
airair,

Did you just jump on a plane across the Atlantic or did you have a work journy to the states that shortened trip to Cuscowilla. In any case, you got balls man.

ICT,

Not sure what you're asking about here.

No my only destination was Cuscowilla. It took one bus, two airplanes, two hours to kill in Newark, then 1 and and half hours with a taxi like transportation, so it was no fun ride in that repect. Now I have even more balls. I got some from Yoda as well.

airair 10-30-2010 09:45 AM

I'm now finished here at Cuscowilla and I'm soon on my way home. I know it's a long travel that takes a long time and it's not exactly cheap to stay here and get lessons. It sounds like a complaint, but it's not. If you have the time and money and you want to treat yourself to something special, then do what I just did. You might learn to play better golf too.

Won't be posting anything the next 30 hours I guess.

Yoda 10-30-2010 06:19 PM

Air and Yoda At Cuscowilla / October 25-29, 2010
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by airair (Post 77853)
I'm now finished here at Cuscowilla and I'm soon on my way home. I know it's a long travel that takes a long time and it's not exactly cheap to stay here and get lessons. It sounds like a complaint, but it's not. If you have the time and money and you want to treat yourself to something special, then do what I just did. You might learn to play better golf too.

Won't be posting anything the next 30 hours I guess.

Safe travels, Air.

You were -- and are -- a marvelous student. Thank you for your dedication and for coming to my lesson tee!

It took you 21 hours to get here:

Bus to Oslo (two hours);

Plane to Newark, NJ (with layover);

Plane to Atlanta, GA;

Private car to Cuscowilla.

But once done . . .

We made it happen, didn't we? A few hours everyday for five days, and we covered the waterfront.

One thing I won't forget:

That little 65-yard knock down you hit on our last day -- first shot and with its character called by me -- in front of the teaching pros at Cuscowilla (and under that pressure!) . . .

Bang!

You hit the red-and-white pole, the "candy cane", dead center on the first hop!

Can't make it up!

Not to mention all the 'cracking' irons and drives you hit -- also with 'gallery' pressure -- with your new alignments. Especially your new grip, shoulder alignment, start up with its coordinated pivot, arms and hands, new Top with its 'structure' and radically different clubshaft alignment, start down waggles putting you in the 'slot', right knee action and wrist roll through impact, and the new 'arrow through the ears' finish.

Amazing.

Nowhere near the 21.5 handicap player swing you had when you arrived!

Then, on the course our last day. Your first drives sailed long and true against the blue October sky. Later, three tee balls over water requiring almost 200-yard carry. Every single one on line and dry!

I am so proud of you, Air.

Bustin' every button.

That's why I called everyone over to take a look. Not to put pressure on you, but to show my fellow teachers just how far one dedicated student could come in such a short time. And you delivered.

:cheers:

:occasion:

Ha det bra, my friend!

:salut:

airair 10-31-2010 07:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 77861)
Safe travels, Air.

You were -- and are -- a marvelous student. Thank you for your dedication and for coming to my lesson tee!

It took you 21 hours to get here:

Bus to Oslo (two hours);

Plane to Newark, NJ (with layover);

Plane to Atlanta, GA;

Private car to Cuscowilla.

But once done . . .

We made it happen, didn't we? A few hours everyday for five days, and we covered the waterfront.

One thing I won't forget:

That little 65-yard knock down you hit on our last day -- first shot and with its character called by me -- in front of the teaching pros at Cuscowilla (and under that pressure!) . . .

Bang!

You hit the red-and-white pole, the "candy cane", dead center on the first hop!

Can't make it up!

Not to mention all the 'cracking' irons and drives you hit -- also with 'gallery' pressure -- with your new alignments. Especially your new grip, shoulder alignment, start up with its coordinated pivot, arms and hands, new Top with its 'structure' and radically different clubshaft alignment, start down waggles putting you in the 'slot', right knee action and wrist roll through impact, and the new 'arrow through the ears' finish.

Amazing.

Nowhere near the 21.5 handicap player swing you had when you arrived!

Then, on the course our last day. Your first drives sailed long and true against the blue October sky. Later, three tee balls over water requiring almost 200-yard carry. Every single one on line and dry!

I am so proud of you, Air.

Bustin' every button.

That's why I called everyone over to take a look. Not to put pressure on you, but to show my fellow teachers just how far one dedicated student could come in such a short time. And you delivered.

:cheers:

:occasion:

Ha det bra, my friend!

:salut:

I'm back. The time difference gives me a time bonus when we travel in this direction, but the jet lag will be sustained a couple of days ...

You make me speechless...

Your enthusiasm is overwhelming. I enjoyed my good shots almost as much as you did. But what I appreciate even more in the long run is that you taught me the motions - for the motion makes the shot - and you got rid of my old trash and made me a seer and taught me all the motions I need (to work on). I actually think I got it - it's not that difficult to understand the way you explained it to me and corrected my wrong doings - almost without mentioning TGM, with one important exception: extensor action - a huge eye opener.

I can never thank you enough for your expertise and kindness. If I win in the lottery, I'll make the trip again.

O.B.Left 10-31-2010 04:20 PM

This sounds like the beginning of some beautiful relationships......(all of them geometric and on plane).

airair 10-31-2010 10:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by innercityteacher (Post 77842)
And what have you "apprenended," or what has been genuine insight for you? Details, young man!

ICT

Are you sure you need more details after Yoda has written about it?

Daryl 10-31-2010 10:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by airair (Post 77895)
Are you sure you need more details after Yoda has written about it?

4 days at Cuscowilla. More details. But you must be exhausted. All that travel. You need a vacation. :)

Yoda 10-31-2010 10:42 PM

Work Week
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Daryl (Post 77901)
4 days at Cuscowilla. More details. But you must be exhausted. All that travel. You need a vacation. :)

Make that FIVE days!

:happy3:

airair 10-31-2010 10:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daryl (Post 77901)
4 days at Cuscowilla. More details. But you must be exhausted. All that travel. You need a vacation.
:)

You are right. The traveling and the blisters in my fingers were the hard part. All the other hard work was like a vacation in its self, now I feel like a bear going into hibernation.

I have made some notes for my own sake - I can share some of them if you want to know more. But not now - it's way too late already (here).

airair 11-01-2010 07:10 AM

From my notes:
 
-The MacDonald exercises were perhaps the most important element in getting me a brand new swing. The brush - brush motion back and thru and how the knees and hips work is basic. That also means that I now will be lifting the left heel 1-2 in. off the ground in my (longer) shots.

-I had to leave my belief of being a hitter - and that meant that the adjusted address position has come in instead of impact fix at address.

-There was a lot of aiming with sticks at the baseline (the magic right forearm and flying wedges?)
-We did some Taly training. Let the arms and hands do the work, not the wrists.
-Do not waggle over the ball with the wrists only - waggle both flying wedges just like when training with the Taly.
-Then learning the finish. The arrow thru the ears (shaft) must be at right angles to the baseline, not pointing backwards to the right of it.
-A stronger 3 knuckles grip.
-Learning to have my left shoulder pointing more to the right at set up.
-In my case it's advisable to have a somewhat closed stance to the baseline.
-High hands, but avoiding to have the left wrist uncocked at address.
-Don't just do this with the longer clubs, but give yourself space also on the shorter shots with a wedge.
-The right arm bent with a limber right elbow - not sticking out too much.
-Learn to drag the wet mop in both directions, so that the takeaway also has its lag in the mark time rhythm of the MacDonald exercises/brush- brush technique.
-At impact let the shoulders be square to the target line instead of moving to the left. Right shoulder lower than the left.
-Then the tricky part for me: The rolling of the left arm in the downswing/thru stroke.
-The importance of the last 3 fingers of the left hand and downtoning the right index finger.
-A better position at the top.
-The down stroke waggle
-A lot of club throwing.(real throwing of clubs on to the range - I'm pretty good at it)
-How to start down.
-Learning to kick in the right knee in the downstroke/thru stroke to get the ball in a better path and to get the weight a lot more into my left side than I have been doing.This is especially important for me because I had problems performing the left hip bump.
-A somewhat more rounded backstroke.
-Trying to avoid hitting straight down the target line but have a feeling of going a little accross it , but just the opposite way that I had always done (avoid OTT, out-to-in)
-Then extensor action and a lot training: shot after shot with different clubs - a lot of drives. And corrections and comments when I didn't get it right and trying to do it more and more correctly.
-Keep the head stationary. Don't let it be drawn to the right when doing extensor action.
-With the driver the ball is more forward than I was used to. Peg the ball up so that half the ball is over the head of the driver on the ground.
-Also chipping and pitching. The short bread and butter shot, cut shots, knock down shots, bunker shots, putting.
-If the divots are too deep - move the ball more forward in the stance.
-And a geometrical slideshow and some practical shot making on the course.

To mention some of the things I needed to work on.

I have certainly forgotten some other things that should have been mentioned and I could perhaps have gone more in detail, but that's all I could find in my notes.

And the social side has its own wonderful history, well worth remembering...

O.B.Left 11-01-2010 10:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by airair (Post 77918)
-The MacDonald exercises were perhaps the most important element in getting me a brand new swing. The brush - brush motion back and thru and how the knees and hips work is basic.

-I had to leave my belief of being a hitter - and that meant that the adjusted address position has come in instead of impact fix at address.

-There was a lot of aiming with sticks at the baseline.
-We did some Taly training.
-Then learning the finish.
-A stronger 3 knuckles grip.
-Learning to have my left shoulder pointing more to right at set up.
-High hands, but avoiding to have the left wrist uncocked at address.
-The right arm bent, but limber - not sticking out too much.
-Learn to drag the wet mop in both directions, so that the takeaway also has its lag in the mark time rhythm of the Macdonald exercises/brush- brush technique.
-Then the tricky part for me: The rolling of the left arm in the downswing/thru stroke.
-The importance of the last 3 fingers of the left hand and downtoning the right index finger.
-A better position at the top.
-The down stroke waggle
-A lot of club throwing.(real throwing of clubs on to the range - I'm pretty good at it)
-How to start down.
-Learning to kick in the right knee in the downstroke/thru stroke to get the ball in a better path and to get the weight a lot more into my left side than I have been doing.
-A somewhat more rounded backstroke.
-Trying to avoid hitting down the target line but have a feeling of going a little accross it , but just the opposite way that I had always done (avoid OTT, out-to-in)
-Then extensor action and a lot training: shot after shot with different clubs - a lot of drives. And corrections and comments when I didn't get it right and trying to do it more and more correctly.
-Also chipping and pitching. The short bread and butter shot, cut shots, knock down shots, bunker shots, putting.
-And a geometrical slideshow and some practical shot making on the course.

To mention some of the things I needed to work on.

I could have gone more in detail, but all this was specific to my old swing, which was a mess.

And the social side has its own wonderful history, well worth remembering...



Great stuff Air. Thanks.

Those McDonald drills are something else arent they. So much for Lynn "just working outa the yellow book".

KevCarter 11-01-2010 10:15 AM

Great stuff Air. TGM in the REAL world!!!
:golf:
Kevin


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