Sunday, June 23, 2019

Volkswagen E-Golf 2019

Each car mat is tailored to fit your car to the manufacturers specifications. The above photos are for colour guidance only. The carpets are good quality and a perfect fit. I'm really happy with my car mats, it´s arrive in time, more or less in 12 days, but I didn't have any advise about when CAR MATS UK sent it to me, It would have been better. In other thing it´s easy to appreciate the hight quality even if I bought the standard mat. Upload an image at checkout to be printed onto the heelpad area of your driver mat. Due to copyright restrictions your embroidery text may not contain any manufacturer, model or brand names. Our car mats fit Volkswagen E-Golf (2015-Present) models. Made from a mixture of nylon and polyurethane, this is our standard car mat. They are made from a 450grm looped weave pile that makes them very hard wearing. Complete with bound edge and PVC or double thickness carpet heelpad to protect the most worn part of the drivers mat. These mats are compatible with original manufacturer fixings if present in the vehicle. Your order will be shipped within 3-5 working days. We aim to dispatch orders as quickly as possible. If you order more than one item, they may be shipped separately. All items are shipped using a 48 hour courier. A tracking number will be assigned and this will be emailed to you. The buyer is responsible for paying the return postage unless there is a manufactures fault. Please contact our team stating your order number before returning the item. The carpets are good quality and a perfect fit. I'm really happy with my car mats, it´s arrive in time, more or less in 12 days, but I didn't have any advise about when CAR MATS UK sent it to me, It would have been better. In other thing it´s easy to appreciate the hight quality even if I bought the standard mat. Union Jack Heel Pads?


The tee shot on this long par five should be played toward the valley of trees in the distance, as the middle of the fairway is obscured by the hillside in the foreground. Balls hit to the right will likely bounce well left to safety off the sagebrush. The second shot can be partially blind, depending on how far you hit it off the tee and plays well downhill. The proper line is just a bit left of the rockpile in the distance, as there is a high likelihood of the ball filtering down the hill and onto the green. However, you must be sure to avoid the deep and scraggly fairway bunker that offers protection from players going directly at the green. The third shot will be played from above the green to a very large and undulating putting surface that breaks sharply from right to left. Little pitch and runs work great here and it’s incredible fun to watch the ball run down the hill and off to the left toward the pin.


I'd nail a perfect drive but push my hybrid second shot well right into the junk, eventually making a crushing double bogey seven. Richard made yet another birdie here, continuing his incredible back nine hot streak, getting to three under on the side! I’m pretty sure Richard said that this is his favourite vista on the entire course, with Nicola Lake and the mountains in the background and the 18th hole sitting above the 17th in the foreground. The tee shot here is played downhill to a fairway that is blind in the picture below. The proper aiming point is the fairway bunker on the left hand side. It’s a pretty straightforward approach shot here into the prevailing wind, with a bit of a false front and a large swale near the back of the green. I'd hit my drive way right here but thankfully things open up quite a bit over there. I'd proceed to get my approach to the front of the very deep green and make about a 12 footer for par after my birdie effort came up well short of the back pin. Richard barely missed another bird, tapping in for the routine par.


A solid finisher, played into the prevailing wind where you need to decide how far right you want to go to open up the view for your second shot. Balls will tend to bounce a bit to the right due to some fairway sloping in that direction but you can have a bit of a blind second shot if you venture too far to the left. According to Richard, there was a lot of debate on where to place this green. Richard headed back in for a conference call while I played a few more holes and took all the photographs you see in these two posts. Afterwards, I headed back out to the Hideout for the steak dinner, sitting and conversing with head superintendent Norley Calder and a few of his friends who he had out as guests on this day. Well, it's pretty easy to see that my time at Sagebrush was something truly special. There are an abundance of different shots to play out here and you are also given many different risk/reward opportunities off the tee and in the fairways.


Accuracy off the tee isn't the most crucial factor at Sagebrush, with plenty of width in the fairways to accommodate wind conditions. As indicated, one of the things Richard was most proud of was the fact that almost every hole had a tee box at the beginning of the fairway to improve playability for novice players. With many of the holes swinging downhill a bit to start, that means the golfer can roll it off the tee and still have a reasonable opportunity to continue to play the hole out. Meanwhile, playing the tips will challenge the best players with more some forced carries sprinkled throughout the course. Richard admitted that Sagebrush might be a pushover for top players in calm conditions but this is a course that was designed with windy conditions in mind, conditions that are prevalent pretty much every afternoon in the Nicola Valley. It is a superb test under normal conditions. Sagebrush also offers incredible variety: looking for short par threes? Got it. Long par threes? Got it too. Driveable par four?