I play Disc Golf, and enjoy it a great deal. I also enjoy photography, and have a camera with me most of the time. Sunday just gone saw the 2015 Chick Flick (a tournament focussing on female players) here in Perth, held at the Rob Hancock Memorial course, and I decided to concentrate on recording the event, rather than playing. Although the name and entry classifications are rather jokey ("Chicks", "Not Chicks", and "Not Chicks Dressed as Chicks"), actual play is pretty darn intense, and scoring divisions were split along more traditional lines, with Women's Open and Advanced, and Men's Open, Advanced, and Rec divisions. Play was two rounds of 12, followed by a final 6 for the top-card Women's Open players. We had 11 women playing - which was a great turnout, given the quite small size of the Perth disc golfing community. As you can see from the photos, conditions were ... challenging, to say the least, with gusts over 50km/h and pounding rain...
ohh boy..
ReplyDeleteI thought bagpipes were banned by the Geneva Convention
ReplyDeleteBagpipes were given to the Scots by their enemies.. so they could hear the stupid buggers coming to attack.
ReplyDeleteThe Norse have em to the Irish, the Irish gave em to the Scots, the English banned them, until they realised the French and the Germans were just as terrified of them. Then the Nordics, who thought they'd gotten rid of them a thousand years before, started playing them again. And the rest of the English-speaking world just copied the English. After the fighting was over.
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