Quote:
Originally Posted by Sliver
I don't know if it's bad eyes, fkd up depth perception or what, but I lose my ball basically every second swing. Even if it's on the fairway. I'll misjudge where it landed by 50 feet. There needs to be beacons in them or something. Wandering around a field filled with guys dressed like dorks looking for a ball is the least fun thing on planet earth.
I mean, I still do it, but I'm always so happy when the game is done and we can move onto something way more fun. By about hole 12 I'm so fkn done. It's so boring I start getting sleepy.
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Have you ever considered sunglasses with brown, rose, green or yellow colored lenses to help you track the ball? It aids contracts which also helps depth perception.
https://www.drivewear.com/golf.aspx?...%20your%20game.
I haven't worn colored lenses for golf. I just think the world looks really damn cool with different colored lenses and I've been buying different ones to play around with lately. I'm sure you can buy cheap $10-20 aviators on Amazon or whatever for this. I don't think you need special polarized lenses or anything like that, but just be aware that it might not block UV rays which means even if your eyes feel less strain, it's not necessarily great for your eyes if you wear them for a long time outdoors.
Blue for instance amplifies the sky and makes things look a bit whiter/cleaner by downplaying greys and browns. It makes things look less dreary during the winter snow pile months.
Yellow I use for computer glasses because it reduces eye strain. In the world it mutes blues, amplifies greens and fluorescent colors pop out a little more.