On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, Mark J. Andy wrote:
> #3, leave the red flag with the person with the radio. If someone calls
> for a red flag over the radio, the radio person will be the best able to
> respond quickly. That person also shouldn't be running for cones if you
> can help it, so they can concentrate on their job (and so control won't
> get broken-up radio reports).
I like your other points but disagree with this one. The radio guy
already has at least one hand full, and is usually located centrally,
further from the course. Ideally each worker has a red flag, but if
there's only one per station I prefer it in the hands of the shagger.
KeS
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