A golf ball’s performance does degrade the longer it sits in the lake. Lot’s of comparisons have shown that.
This is absolutely the truth^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
My Dad was a self taught (with a 7 iron he found), golfer that without ever a lot of practice or lessons, shot in the 60`s for 18 holes until he got past his 60`s.. Straight strokes, no handicaps, etc...
Any Course, any time, he was naturally gifted, and very strong.. Like on a par-5, 500-yard hole, be pin-high on the green in 2, and an easy putt in 3, an eagle.. And these were those old steel shaft, wooden, normal sized woods, irons; none of this stuff they use now.. I watched him as his caddy, and his speed of his swing was so fast, the steel shaft looked like it was flexing..
The sound of the club head sweet spot hitting that ball was also very "sharp" and high pitched. No one else he ever played with made that sound when they used their driver..
He liked to go into the rough, etc., to find golf balls, and we always looked in the creeks we played over and found buckets of balls..
The ones that had been in the water always, when bounced on hard smooth concrete like in the garage, sounded "dead", while the ones that were found dry, AND they were good brands like titleist, dunlop max fli, wilson staff, spalding, etc., always, always, made a sharp "ping" when bounced off that same surface, and always bounced higher.... And they always went farther..
Thanks for the opportunity to recall those awesome times..
Dan F