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Descriptive Essay - The Local Golf Course

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Our town is notable for having several interesting golf courses. For those residents whose interests lie in other pursuits, those courses are a waste of large quantities of otherwise useful space that could be better used to construct another mall or store. For the golf enthusiasts among us, however, the preponderance of courses is a delightful benefit of living in this otherwise uninteresting locale, where the only saving grace is the plentiful supply of interesting people.

The golf course is an oasis of artificiality in a desert of flat land and unnatural colors. While the surrounding landscape is endlessly flat, with only the trees and buildings obstructing the planar geography, the golf course is a diverse landscape with hills, …show more content…

In most cases, there is a flat green path between the hole and the player, but there has yet to be a golfer proficient enough to utilize that fairway every time, requiring the player to cope with the treacherous obstacles that lie in wait for every errant shot.

The absurdly close manicure of the fairways and greens are contrasted with the thick, deep grass referred to as the "rough." The rough is not ubiquitous though, there are pits of sand, unforgiving abysses of liquid that are rather innocuously referred to as "water hazards," and trees that either swallow the ball or stand directly in the path of the next shot, making the intended destination utterly inaccessible.

The whole unpleasantness which can result from an errant shot is tolerated for those rare shots that are ecstasy from beginning to end. The perfect, vibrationless contact of club and ball, the shadow of the ball painted against the sky, the sight of the ball nestled close to the flagstick, the feeling of triumph that results from that extremely improbable sequence of events all make up for the time and frustrations needed to learn the game.

A player's home course is special. He plays it so many times, he knows it inside and out. The hills, the hazards all become familiar to him. He is able to judge his progress one day against nearly

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