Friday, May 30, 2014

Ask Linda #854-Hazard boundary



Ask Linda #854-Hazard boundary

Linda…the course I play has a lateral hazard on the left side of a par five. The hole is a sweeping dogleg, and while the hazard has red stakes, there is no visible red line on the ground. Because of the dogleg and the distance between the red stakes, drawing a straight line between stakes to define the hazard line gives a far different answer than assuming an equal distance between the water edge and the red stake. Question…to determine the hazard line in the absence of a red line on the ground, do you always draw a straight line between the stakes or do you assume the red line would follow a logical path around a curve in the hazard?

Thanks,
Lou from Texas

Dear Lou,

When there is no line on the ground, the margin of a hazard is defined by the stakes. If the Committee has placed a sufficient number of stakes to properly mark the hazard, you should be able to determine the margin of the hazard by drawing an imaginary line from one stake to the next.

However, not all Committees are diligent about staking hazards, and hazard stakes often disappear for various reasons. If the margin of the hazard is not properly marked, the player may not take advantage of or be penalized by the error. Therefore, if the ball clearly lies in the hazard, the player must proceed under the Rules for a ball in a water hazard [Decision 26/2]. The same holds true if the ball clearly lies outside the hazard.

In determining the margin of an unmarked or improperly marked hazard, the player should follow the same guidelines that a Committee would. The margin of the hazard is where the ground breaks down to form the depression that holds the water [Decision 33-2a/4]. When the area adjacent to the margin is covered with dense undergrowth, you may use the cut line as your hazard margin.

Linda
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