Find Courses – Book Tee Times – Save on Green Fees

by nobogies on April 26, 2009

Why not take your game up a notch and enjoy some new scenery by playing some new courses? If you consistently play the same course – or even a few courses – you will get better on THOSE courses but you’ll be limiting the growth of your overall game. You need new challenges to improve! Can’t get on your regular course when you have time to tee off? Want to play more golf for the same money? We have the solution:

GolfSigma has created a tee time search engine that makes it fast and easy to compare courses, tee times, and green fees.

We are very impressed with the way they manage to display so much information on one page and still allow you to quickly switch between options. The only way to truly appreciate it is to go do a sample search yourself. Here is a screen shot from their actual site that we hope will encourage you to do just that:

SixSigma Tee Time Search Engine

GolfSigma Tee Time Search Engine

Did you know that green fees half an hour apart on the same course can vary by more than 100%? In the above example, The Black Mountain Country Club fees are $50 at 8:30, $108 at 9:00, $45 at 9:30, and $40 at 11:30 all in the same morning. If your schedule is flexible you could play far more golf for the same money!

The GolfSigma search engine is truly fast and simple to use. With our background in Web design, usability, and ecommerce we are far more likely to be suggesting improvements than raving about great usability because we are NOT easily impressed. This site is really that useful and incredibly well done.

We hope you’ll head over to GolfSigma right now while you’re thinking about it to do a search for yourself. Using it will make a believer of you.

If you have any questions or feedback about their site you can follow GolfSigma at Twitter.


Keep in touch with us:

{ 13 comments… read them below or add one }

ryan from private golf course October 23, 2009 at 12:37 am

Yes I agree with you to have an improvement to your self in playing golf you have to face different challenges.

Reply

Golf Ball Collector November 11, 2009 at 2:45 pm

i honestly never knew that the prices changed at driffrent times like that i will definetly go early as possible

Reply

Hasan from searchEngines November 22, 2009 at 9:38 pm

Well done, the Golf search engine is really useful for people who are interested in golf. Keep up the work.

Reply

Dean Saliba December 2, 2009 at 2:24 pm

Twitter: @indblog

Golf is something of a secret guilty pleasure of mine. I’ve never played it as the only golf course near me has people in it who would probably shoot me if I tried to join up. :P
Dean Saliba´s last blog ..About To Make Use Of A Dead Domain My ComLuv Profile

Reply

Antony December 12, 2009 at 3:04 pm

Hi, before reading this, I don’t know that the prices are different in one time with another time. Nice info, thanks for sharing.

Reply

Club from Hybrid Golf Clubs December 21, 2009 at 2:04 am

Great service! I saved a lot of time and found what I needed. Thank you.

Reply

bankowned December 21, 2009 at 6:38 am

the prices changed at different times like that i will definitely go early as possible, thanks for the information

Reply

Golf Hook Fix December 21, 2009 at 8:11 pm

Excellent information regarding the greens fees at different tee times. I constantly tell my buddies that playing ‘off-peak- hours is the way to go and now I’m sending your post to them, as well so they can see I’ve been telling the truth!

Another great idea is to play ‘twilight hours’, which varies depending on the course, but many have ‘twilight hours’ starting as early as 4:30PM. – plenty enough time to get in a full 18.
Golf Hook Fix´s last blog ..Golf Hook Fix Starts With The Wrists updated Sun Dec 20 2009 8:58 pm CST My ComLuv Profile

Reply

Dan from Tampa Property Management December 21, 2009 at 10:10 pm

Twitter: @dannyintampa

I really need to start getting back into golf. It has been over a year since I last got on the course but need to get back in the swing of things.
Dan @ Tampa Property Management´s last blog ..DR Horton Schooner Cove My ComLuv Profile

Reply

tommy from Business Guide December 22, 2009 at 7:12 am

golf is one of my favorite sports, very relaxing not make me so exhausted. and a great place to make a new friends, i met my best friend on golf field :D
tommy@Business Guide´s last blog ..Debt Advice My ComLuv Profile

Reply

Michael from GPS Auto Navigation January 31, 2010 at 1:17 pm

I must admit, I came for some keyword luv only to discover a superb blog with great information. I look out onto a golf course which I don’t use as much as I should. Thanks and continued success.

Reply

Chris from Hybrid Golf Clubs February 16, 2010 at 12:33 pm

Great information! Never knew this program existed before, thanks for the heads up. I’ll try and use it this weekend and see if it works right.

Reply

Tattoomenow February 27, 2010 at 8:52 am

Hey, I just want to share some historical details on the origin of golf with you and your other readers. Well, the origin of golf is uncertain and open to debate. A number of historians trace the sport back to the Roman game of paganica, in which players used a bent stick to hit a stuffed leather ball. One assumption states that paganica spread right through Britain and Europe as the Romans conquered most of the continent, during the first century B.C., and ultimately evolved into the modern game.

Others cite chuiwan (“chui” means striking and “wan” means small ball) as the progenitor, a Chinese game played between the eighth and 14th centuries. The game is thought to have been introduced into Europe during the Middle Ages.

Another early game that was similar to modern golf was called chambot in France and cambuca in England. This game was, in turn, exported to the Low Countries, Germany, and England. Some observers, however, believe that golf descended from the Persian game, chaugán. In addition, kolven was played annually in Loenen, Netherlands, beginning in 1297, to commemorate the capture of the assassin of Floris V, a year earlier.

According to the most widely accepted account, however, the modern game begun in Scotland around the 12th century, with shepherds knocking stones into rabbit holes on the current site of the Old Course at St Andrews

Reply

Leave a Comment

CommentLuv Enabled

This site uses KeywordLuv. Enter YourName@YourKeywords in the Name field to take advantage.

Previous post:

Next post: