When the bug bites, you graduate from three discs to a full bag shaped for every shot. Seven discs covering every stability and speed, a backpack that holds them plus water and a chair, a laser rangefinder to read the distance, and a putting basket for backyard practice. Tournament players carry options; the right disc for the right wind.
Plans
Choose a plan that fits your needs and budget
Item List
5The Discs
2 itemsPractice
1 items| Item | Category | Specs | Qty | Price | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| - | TypePortable Chains24 | 1 | $110 | View Shop |
Bag & Rangefinder
2 itemsPractice
1FAQ
Common questions about this kit
Why so many discs?
Different stabilities and speeds for different shots and winds — a headwind needs an overstable disc; a tailwind, understable; a forehand, a different fade. A full bag gives you the right tool for every lie and every breeze.
Is a rangefinder allowed?
In most casual play and many tournaments, yes — distance-measuring devices that read only distance (not wind or slope) are permitted. Knowing the exact feet changes club selection, just like ball golf.
Why a backyard basket?
Putting is 40% of the score, and it is pure repetition. A practice basket plus 10 minutes a day drops strokes faster than any new driver. The pros who putt best are the ones who putt most.
How long do discs last?
Years, but they get beat in — a new disc is overstable; a seasoned one flies straighter. Pros cycle discs: buy the same mold, beat them in over time, and have a fresh-stable and a beat-straight version of the same disc.
User Reviews
A full disc bag and my trail bag share the right-tool-for-the-shot gospel — a stability range for the wind is a tire pressure for the terrain. Cycled discs beat in like broken-in grips, agreed.