Gripe No. 6: The ‘all-blue’ disc golf bag

I don’t understand the appeal of the “all-blue” disc golf bag

And yes, I’m meaning to single out that color.

Occasionally, you’ll see all-pink bags – maybe an all-red or all-purple a time or two. But you don’t come across them enough to label them a “trend” or “movement.” They’re merely the product of quirky, obsessive-compulsive disc golfers. The sport’s weird – not a problem.

This ISN’T the case with all-blue bags, though …

They’re everywhere.

If Jeff Dahmer were to build a disc golf bag of his own, he’d probably do something bonkers like fill the thing with nothing but crystal-clear discs – and maybe some napkins and seasoning salt. But for as crazy as THAT sounds, buying solely blue discs is one sanity notch above it …

#Truth

I can’t be for certain where my disdain for blue plastic began. If I had to guess, I’d go with elementary school. Everybody was obsessed with it. Candy, Gatorade, lunch boxes and cupcake frosting when somebody celebrated a birthday – it ALL had to be blue ALL the freaking time.

DGPT: Catrina Allen

Of course, there’s nothing inherently evil about the color blue …

Adults like it just fine; I like it just fine.

But doesn’t it seem weird for full-blown grown-ups to obsess over a color so much they’d willingly compromise the efficiency of the bag-building process to commit to it? Given the inconsistency of golf discs from run to run, the consumerist gymnastics required to build an all-blue bag with ONLY discs that feel and fly great is nothing short of delusion.

In kindergarten, I sat next to a kid who still popped a pacifier whenever he’d get upset

This is disc golf’s version of that.

DGPT: Drew Gibson

Lastly, here’s the cockroach atop this ice-cream sundae …

Blue discs are hard to find.

Like, run rampant with a disc golf bag chock-full of highlighter-yellow frisbees. Again, finding the right runs of the right molds will suck, but at least they’ll be easy to locate when you do. Good luck finding that blue Lucid Maverick in the woods when the sun goes down …

It ain’t happening.

If this article struck a bit too close to home for comfort, print off a color wheel, study it like mad, seek professional help and welcome some less-depressing shades into your disc golf bag.

The less Eiffel 65 in there, the better.

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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.

5 thoughts on “Gripe No. 6: The ‘all-blue’ disc golf bag”

  1. Blue discs are actually the best color disc, let me break it down for you.

    Easy to find in the fall. With yellow and orange leaves all over the disc golf course, good luck finding your yellow, orange or red disc that gets buried as it slides under the freshly fallen foliage.

    Perfect for the color blind disc golfer. As a red/green colorblind person, blue stands out the most in the woods or in a field of green grass or tall weeds.

    When your friends are helping you look for a disc, they don’t have to ask which color it is. The answer is always blue.

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  2. I throw all blue discs, specifically because they are super easy for me to find. I rarely ever lose discs, the only thing blue around me is the sky, I’m not looking for my plastic up there. Maybe you just don’t like blue, that’s fine. Why you gotta be a hater though? I have a blue delta cart 11 too, cos I have 2 plates and 4 screws in my back and I can’t carry a bag anymore without tons of back pain. You going to hate on me for that too?

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