They’re pretty much used to keep the green from having a bunch of impact craters all over it. The ball coming down from a high angle can leave a decent dent in the ground.
I always thought of the patch of grass ripped out by the club when driving the ball. Always wondered how those short prongs would fix that big of a patch. TIL
Yeah, basically the Swiss Army Knife version of the divot tool.
The version below is pretty common, a golf bag should never be without one. Though, I have seen people use keys instead.
I knew it was a divot tool, but how do you use one?
Basically you poke the fork bits into the ground next to the divot at an angle and then push down to raise the divot.
Oh! Would have thought that would require longer tines, but I’ve never golfed, guess the divots are smaller than I imagined.
They’re pretty much used to keep the green from having a bunch of impact craters all over it. The ball coming down from a high angle can leave a decent dent in the ground.
I always thought of the patch of grass ripped out by the club when driving the ball. Always wondered how those short prongs would fix that big of a patch. TIL