Etiquette & Culture

Divots, Ball Marks & Bunkers: The Course Care Every Golfer Owes

Cross-section diagram of correct ball-mark repair pushing edges inward versus incorrect prying that tears roots.

Golf courses are the only sports venues maintained partly by the players mid-game. Every group inherits the course from the group ahead and hands it to the group behind — and the whole system runs on three tiny skills that, weirdly, nobody formally teaches: fixing ball marks, handling divots, and raking bunkers. Most golfers do at least one of them wrong (usually the ball mark). Here's course care done correctly, once and for all.

Ball Marks: The One Everyone Fixes Wrong

When your approach shot lands on a soft green, it stamps a small crater — a ball mark (or pitch mark). Unrepaired, the compressed grass dies and leaves a scar that takes weeks to heal and deflects everyone's putts until it does. Repaired within minutes, it heals in a day or two.

The correct technique — and this is the part most golfers get backwards:

The etiquette standard: fix yours plus one more you find. If every golfer did that, greens would be perfect by dinner. On busy public courses, be the person the greenkeeper doesn't know exists.

Divots: Replace or Fill? (It Depends on the Grass)

A divot is the pelt of turf your iron shears off in the fairway — a sign of a proper strike, nothing to apologize for. The repair rule confuses people because the correct move genuinely varies:

On tees (especially par 3s), use the sand mix rather than replacing — tee divots are shallow and sand levels the launch pad best.

Bunkers: Enter Low, Rake Backward, Leave It Boring

Bunker care errors are mostly entry-and-exit errors:

One rules note that surprises people: since 2019 you may legally remove leaves, stones, and other loose impediments from a bunker before your shot. The old "touch nothing" terror is outdated — you just still can't test the sand or ground your club right behind the ball.

The Rest of the Ledger

Smaller debts every golfer owes the course:

Why Bother (Beyond Virtue)

Three selfish reasons. First, course care is the most visible skill in golf — a beginner who repairs marks properly reads as a golfer instantly, regardless of score; it buys more credibility with a random pairing than any drive you'll hit (only pace of play matters more, and we've covered that playbook too). Second, you putt on the greens you and everyone else repaired — the karma is same-day. Third, greenkeepers notice groups, and being on the staff's good side at your home course pays off in a hundred small ways.

Three habits, three seconds each: push the ball mark inward, lay the divot back or sand it flush, rake your way out backward. That's the entire tuition for golf's oldest club — the people who leave the course better than they found it. For the rest of the unwritten rulebook, start with our complete beginner's etiquette guide.

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