Gripe No. 74: Drinking fountains not working at disc golf courses

Water.

It’s everywhere.

Seventy-one percent of the Earth is covered in it.

Your body is made up of 60% of it, too.

But you know where it frequently isn’t?

Coming out of virtually every single drinking fountain on every single disc golf course on the planet when it’s hotter than h*ck. If you’re part of a parks department or know of somebody who cosplays as Leslie Knope during the workweek, please share this concern – it’s an urgent matter.

DGPT: The 2024 PDGA Professional Disc Golf World Championships

I understand this could be a Utah problem, but I find that hard to believe. During the fall and winter, I get it – frozen pipes are a problem. I cut my sprinklers; the city cuts its water fountains.

Understandable.

But when the weather starts to get warmer, turn those suckers back on – and make sure they actually work, while you’re at it. During the early spring, the weather’s usually cool enough to get by on a single Nalgene. But come the dehydration-inducing groin-kick that is July and August, safe disc golf isn’t merely a matter of screaming “Fore!” after an ugly huck …

It’s drinking water, too.

Listen, I’m the guy who’s (somehow) found a way to make fun of thirst-quenching in disc golf.

Camelbak-equipped disc golf bags make the game seem more like a hike through the Sahara than a walk in the park – which it quite literally is, by the way. And those over-the-shoulder bags and backpacks that come with a ridiculous, six-pack cooler insert speak volumes about the sometimes iffy culture of the game I’ve come to love over the past pair of decades …

But drinking water?

EVERY human has a right to it …

And to the clean stuff, might I add.

Flickr: The Common Drinking Fountain

This includes disc golfers, of course. Even those who’ve not yet learned the importance of the “pack-it-in, pack-it-out” philosophy. Again, nine times out of 10, the 32-ounce water bottle you rock is enough to get the job done during a casual round. But on dangerously hot days and during lengthy, backup-plagued C-tiers, it’s nice to know you can refill your go-to guzzler, if necessary.

As to the cleanliness of drinking fountains at public disc golf courses, based on what I’ve seen the homeless and shamelessly inebriated do on a couple of occasions, I’m confident most could be condemned by the board of health. But that’s a topic for another day – one issue at a time.

Get a good night’s sleep. Eat your fruits and vegetables.

Drink more water.

Good advice for us all.

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Lucas Miller

Lucas Miller is the founder and editor-in-chief of Green Splatter. When he’s not out tossing a Champion Rhyno in his native Utah, he’s watching true-crime documentaries with his wife, wrestling his twin boys and praying the Oklahoma City Thunder’s rebuild passes quickly.

4 thoughts on “Gripe No. 74: Drinking fountains not working at disc golf courses”

  1. I prefer to be Ron Swanson which is exactly why the fountains don’t work…..”Government is a waste of tax payers money.”

    Reply
  2. My biggest issue with this is that I’ve seen some questionable individuals using the water fountains at my local courses for other things besides drinking. I just rely on myself: carry more water on hotter days, extra water in the car, maybe a Gatorade if needed.

    Reply

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