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Golf Cart Safety
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Return to Golf
Cart Rules and Etiquette |
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| Golf cart safety
can be summarized with this very simple piece of advice:
Don't act stupid!
Most on-course accidents involving
golf carts - and there are probably more of them than
you might think - stem from golfers, well, acting
stupid: The equivalent of golf-cart joyriding.
Standing rather that sitting inside
the cart; hanging legs or arms out of the cart; the
driver not paying attention to where he or she is going;
taking sharp turns at too high speeds; or operating a
cart when impaired by alcohol.
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| The
rules of the road - real cars on real roads, that is -
apply just as well to the cart paths. |
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- When you first pile into your
cart, read over the "warnings" or "safety
guidelines" stickers or text that most golf carts
come with. And observe those rules! They
serve as good reminders before you begin your round
of golf.
- Keep your arms and legs inside
the cart when the cart is in motion. It's especially
easy to catch a cleated shoe in the ground, for
example, if you decide to hang a foot outside the
cart while traveling. And that can easily lead to a
sprained ankle or even a broken ankle or foot. Then
there are obstacles - tree branches, for example -
that arms or legs extended from the cab of the cart
can impact.
- Most carts in use on golf
courses are not equipped with safety belts. Don't go
flying around corners or attempt sharp curves at top
speed - this can result in someone being thrown from
the cart (yes, people have been killed as a result
of being thrown from a golf cart).
- If you are the driver, don't
press on the accelerator until your partner is
seated.
- Watch the cart path. Sounds
simple, but just as a driver on a highway can be
distracted by something and lose sight of the road,
so can golfers get distracted and drive right off
the designated cart path. Depending on what's in
front of you, that can be dangerous.
- Be extra vigilant on cart paths
around the clubhouse, and at any intersections or
bottlenecks on the course. Carts colliding is not a
good idea.
- Don't speed into a stop behind a
parked cart. You know what we mean: Your partners
are already up at the green and parked, you race
ahead to catch up and slam on the brakes just as
your cart is about to rear-end theirs. See above:
Colliding carts is not a good idea.
- Use the carts as they are
intended on the golf course, not as a toy, not for
joyriding (a NASCAR driver was goofing off and
climbed onto the roof of a moving golf cart on the
golf course; he was thrown from the roof and
injured).
- Don't take the cart to places on
the golf course where it is not intended to go:
Through thickets of trees, over rough terrain, down
through gullies or ravines, through water.
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Yes, these are
common-sense, even simplistic golf cart safety
guidelines. Hey, golf cart safety on the course ain't
brain surgery! We'll repeat what we said at the top:
What it boils down to is "don't
act stupid!" |
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