1surapol 1ohmyLIFE 1npcactus 1donut 1Shoot 1Puki 1Short art 1Nok 1Crystalresq
|
No |
Cactus Name |
Other
names from Reference |
แหล่งเมล็ดพันธุ์ |
ชู้ด |
|
1 |
Astrophytum
myriostigma |
Astrophytum myriostigma |
tum_rabbit |
Astrophytum myriosticma |
|
2 |
Discocactus
araneispinus |
1. Discocactus zehntneri B. & R. |
คุณโอภาส |
Discocactus
aranispinus |
|
3 |
Melocactus evae |
|
คุณโอภาส |
Discocactus zehntneri |
|
4 |
Coryphantha
maiz-tablasensis |
page 26 |
คุณโอภาส |
Coryphantha Elephantides
|
|
5 |
Thelocactus bicolor |
1.Thelocactus
bicolor v. tricolor |
tum_rabbit |
Dolichothele longimamma |
|
6 |
Hamatocactus setispinus |
|
tum_rabbit |
Hamatocactus setispinus |
|
7 |
Obregonia denegrii |
1. Ariocarpus denegrii |
คุณโอภาส |
Ariocarpus trigonus |
|
8 |
Ariocarpus
trigonus |
page 156 |
คุณ Baso |
Ariocarpus fissuratus |
|
9 |
Echinocactus grusonii |
page 32 |
tum_rabbit |
Echinocactus grusonii |
|
10 |
Notocactus ottonis |
1.
Parodia ottonis |
คุณโอภาส |
Notocactus ottonis |
|
|
|
|
total |
3 |
|
|
|
|
อันดับที่ได้ |
4 |
|
|
|
|
เข้ารอบ 1 |
|
SHOOT
| Putts and short chips are ideally played without much movement of the body, but most other golf shots are played using variants of the full golf swing. The full golf swing itself is used in tee and fairway shots. A full swing is a complex rotation of the body aimed at accelerating the club head to a great speed. For a right-handed golfer, it consists of a backswing to the right, a downswing to the left (during which the ball is hit), and a follow through. The full golf swing is a complex motion that is often difficult to learn. It is common for beginners to spend several months practicing the very basics before playing their first ball on a course. Generally, even once a golfer has attained professional status, a coach is still necessary in order for the player to maintain good fundamentals |
Relatively few golfers play left-handed (i.e., swing back to
the left and forward to the right). The percentage of golfers in the
A golf ball acquires spin when it is hit. Backspin is imparted for almost every shot due to the golf club's loft (i.e., angle between the clubface and a vertical plane). A spinning ball deforms the flow of air around it similar to an airplane wing; a back-spinning ball therefore experiences an upward force which makes it fly higher and longer than a ball without spin. However, too much backspin can negatively impact distance travelled; the increased lift wastes the ball's momentum in gaining altitude rather than in traveling along its flight path. The amount of backspin also influences the behavior of a ball when it impacts the ground. A ball with little backspin will usually roll out for a few metres/yards while a ball with more backspin may not roll at all, or even roll backwards. Sidespin occurs when the clubface is not aligned perpendicularly to the plane of swing. Sidespin makes the ball curve left or right, and can be used intentionally or occur unintentionally. For a right-handed player, a subtle curve to the left is called a draw. A severe curve to the left and downward is a hook. A subtle curve to the right is a fade, while a severe curve away and upward is a slice. Draws and fades are caused by slight misalignments between the clubface and swing plane because of a slightly "open" or "closed" clubface at contact; a skilled player can control the amount of draw or fade to make the ball curve along the path of the fairway. Slices and hooks however indicate a severe misalignment, mistiming or other flaw in the player's swing, such as a swing not parallel to the desired line of travel, the club contacting the ball early or late in the swing, etc. They are generally undesirable as they reduce carry distance, are difficult to predict and therefore difficult to adjust for, and cause the ball to veer sharply off of the fairway and into hazards, trees and/or out-of-bounds.












