INTERACTIVE PRESSURIZED WATER MINIATURE GOLF COURSE
An improved miniature golf course provides water features which may advance, retard, or randomly impact the motion of the golf ball. The features may also wet the players by spraying them, forcing them to wade, misting them, etc. The features may take the form of water jets, streams, waterfalls, cascades, swirling turbulent water, water tunnels, triggers, alternative routes to the green, alternative parts of the green reached by different water features, fountains, gratings, nets, floating fairways and greens, ramps, waterwheels, water cannons, and combinations thereof.
A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains material which is subject to copyright protection. The copyright owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent document or the patent disclosure, as it appears in the Patent and Trademark Office patent file or records, but otherwise reserves all copyright rights whatsoever. 37 CFR 1.71(d).
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONSN/A
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThis invention relates generally to golf games, and specifically to miniature golf games having interesting course layouts and features.
STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY FUNDED RESEARCHThis invention was not made under contract with an agency of the US Government, nor by any agency of the US Government.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONMiniature golf courses in modern times tend toward exciting decorations. Most modern miniature golf courses have lush planting, ponds, and outré additions like volcanoes and pirate ships, especially themes for courses, parts of courses or holes: pirate themes, wilderness themes, and other fantastic themes.
However, most modern miniature golf courses have in fact got quite old fashioned play of the holes. Most modern miniature golf courses have holes which feature some fairly traditional arrangements of geometric obstacles, walls, tunnels, hills and valleys.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,197,738 in fact mentions this exact issue, stating, “ . . . such modern miniature golf courses courses have been analyzed to be generally stagnant in design of the individual hole in play, and innovations of late have been essentially made only in the décor and environs of the course layout—such as jungle motifs, space motifs, etc. But, by and large, the design of the hole continues to be conservative, if changed at all.”
What is relatively rare however, is to see water used as part of a modern miniature golf course hole. In general water is kept to the sides of the holes and is used essentially as decoration. Thus the players will likely find themselves playing a fairly tame hole while walking beside a pond, the pond having fish or a faux pirate ship, or perhaps walking over a bridge from the green of one hole to the tee-off area of another hole.
Rarely, a golf course hole might have water used as a passive obstacle. In the passive water obstacle hole, the players may find the hole looping around a puddle of water, or might have to putt the ball across a narrow bridge which itself spans a very narrow body of water. If the player accidentally hits the ball into the water, the player then does nothing more than fishing the ball out of the water and placing it back on the course.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,478,076 to Desjardins (Dec. 26, 1995) at least attempts to enliven the proceedings by providing a modern miniature golf course cup which detects the entry of a ball when a player has successfully sunk a putt. It then activates sprinklers, as a surprise, for laughter inducement. It is worth mentioning that this device does not actually alter the play of the overall hole in any way, as the mechanics of putting remain the same: the sprinklers come on only after a putt is sunk into the cup.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,118,105 to Benevento (Oct. 10, 2006) is similar in that regard: it detects entry of a ball into the cup, which can then activate a pachinko game, and which might in turn activate a water sprayer. Again, the actual play of the hole is not implicated at all.
The history of water, in both full sized and miniature golf has always been to use the water as an obstacle to be avoided. A penalty is always assessed if water is encountered in play on a full-sized golf course. It would be preferable to provide a miniature or full sized golf course that changes that mentality and usage. It would be preferable to provide water features that are used not just as obstacles to be avoided, but also as an ally to be used strategically to accomplish the goal of minimizing golf stroke counts, which in turn makes the course more enjoyable and memorable.
It would be preferable to enliven the actual golf play of the game by providing courses which use water in an interactive manner, not just a passive manner.
It would further be preferable to provide a golf course hole which uses water not just to retard the ball's progress but to change its motion or even advance the ball.
It would further be preferable to provide a golf course hole which uses the actual pressure of water, hydraulically, to influence the play of the hole in terms of actual golfing experience of selecting routes and shots and attempting to make accurate shots.
It would yet further be preferable to provide a golf course hole which uses spraying or misting of players during the course of the play of the hole not just for amusement but also to impact the golf strategy choices made by the player (again: routes chosen, shots to attempt, and accuracy) during play, for example, to cause players to attempt to avoid getting wet.
It would even further be preferable to provide a modern miniature golf course which as to a degree features of a water park, that is, which invites players to get wet while playing the game of miniature golf.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION General SummaryThe present invention teaches that water may be used interactively during play of a golf course hole. The hydraulic pressure of water, created by gravity, by pumping, by nozzles, jets, misting, flow and more may be used to alter the course of play of a golf hole. Water is not used as a passive obstacle, or for retrieval of balls, but rather is used to alter the trajectory of a ball when it is putted, or to cause a player to have to make choices about playing a hole knowing that they may get wet themselves, or to provide a more active, exciting play of the hole.
The features may take the form of water jets, streams, waterfalls, cascades, swirling turbulent water, water tunnels, triggers, alternative routes to the green, alternative parts of the green reached by different water features, fountains, gratings, nets, floating fairways and greens, ramps, waterwheels, water cannons, and combinations thereof.
Summary in Reference to ClaimsIt is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide an improved miniature golf course hole for use with a golf ball during a course of play in which a player is putting the golf ball about a tee-off area, a fairway area and a green area, wherein the improvement comprises:
providing pressurized water and using the pressure of the water to alter the motion of such ball during such course of play.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole for use with a golf ball by a player, the golf course hole comprising:
a water feature, the water feature having pressurized water, the golf course hole having a layout, the layout designed so that while moving, the ball will enter the pressurized water and the pressurized water will alter the moving of the ball,
the water feature having pressurized water being one member selected from the group consisting of: jets, sprayers, misters, cascades, waterfalls and combinations thereof.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the alteration of the moving of the ball further comprises:
one member selected from the group consisting of: retarding the ball, randomly altering the moving of the ball, providing alternative water routes of advancing the ball, and combinations thereof.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the water feature comprises: a stream which moves such ball in a manner selected from the group consisting of: advancing the ball, retarding the ball, randomly altering the moving of the ball, moving the ball to a first portion of such green area.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein such ball further comprises: a normal sinking ball or a floating ball, and the water feature further comprises an outlet which allows the water to depart but strands the ball out of such water feature, the outlet further comprising: a grating, a net, and combinations thereof.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the water feature further comprises: a fountain having a plurality of water-filled levels with water flowing out of each level, the water flowing out of the fountain in at least one directions depending upon where in the fountain such player hits such ball.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole further comprising:
a second water feature, such player having the choice to attempt to hit such ball into either of such water feature or such second water feature, the second water feature altering the motion of such ball in a manner different from the first water feature.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the water feature further comprises one member selected from the group consisting of: waterfalls which such ball must be hit through, waterfalls which such player must pass through, cascades which alter the motion of such ball by passing it across a plurality of obstacles within the cascade, terraces down which the water carries such ball, and combinations thereof.
It is therefore yet another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the water feature comprises: one member selected from the group consisting of: a portion of the fairway which is afloat, a portion of the green which is afloat, a barrel bridge, a wave maker and combinations thereof
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the water feature further comprises:
a stream carrying such ball for a first distance, with a walking path beside the stream for the first distance, so that such player may walk beside such ball as it is carried.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the water feature further comprises:
at least one water tunnel which such ball passes through while in such water.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the hole further comprises:
a vertical obstacle over which the water feature propels such ball.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the water feature further comprises:
a trigger mechanism which actuates the water feature upon one member selected from the group consisting of: random actuation, timed actuation, actuation by entry of such ball into a first part of the water feature, actuation by entry of such player into a first part of such hole, and combinations thereof
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the water feature further comprises:
a waterwheel having at least one bucket disposed so that the bucket may move to a low position in which the bucket retrieves such ball from the water feature and a high position in which the bucket releases the ball out of such water feature.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the water feature further comprises:
at least one member selected from the group consisting of: buckets which periodically fill and tip over to flood the fairway, buckets which periodically fill and tip over to flood the green, buckets which periodically fill and tip over to advance the ball and combinations thereof.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole, wherein the water feature further comprises: a mechanism which shoots the ball using water.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole wherein the water feature further comprises: at least one water gate which has a first position in which the water gate allows water to flow through and a second position in which the water gate prevents water from flowing through.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole for use with a golf ball during a course of play by a player putting such golf ball into a cup, the golf course hole comprising:
a water feature which wets the player during such course of play and not after putting such golf ball into such cup.
It is therefore another aspect, advantage, objective and embodiment of the invention, in addition to those discussed previously, to provide miniature golf course hole for further use by a second player, wherein the wetting of the player during the course of play further comprises one member selected from the group consisting of: requiring the player to wade in water, triggering fountains to wet such player, triggering sprayers to wet such player, wetting such player when the player follows their ball into an area of spraying, requiring such player to pass through a waterfall, requiring such player to pass by a water feature controlled by such second player, allows such player to choose between a dry route to the green and a wet route to the green, and combinations thereof
- Water feature: geysers 11
- Fairway area 12
- Tee area 14
- Hole 16
- Green area 18
- Ball 20
- Water feature: ball jet 21
- Lower fairway area 22a
- Upper fairway area 22b
- Vertical feature (bump) 23c
- Hole 26
- River water feature 31
- Slope 33
- Flow direction 35
- Hole 36
- Tunnel 37
- Outlet 39
- Waterfall water features in/out 41, 43
- Tunnel 45
- Hole 46
- Stream 51
- Angled wall 53
- Hole 56
- Gratings 59a, 59b
- Water flow 61
- Upper fairway area 62
- Cascade 63
- Obstacle 64
- Outlet 69
- Water flow 71
- Upper fairway area 72
- Terrace 73
- Green 76
- Grating 79
- Water flow 81
- Exit hole 83
- Hole 86
- Water feature 91
- Fairway 92
- Putting area 94
- Hole 96
- Green 98
- Hole 1006
- Green area 1008
- Water course 1101
- Separator (island) 1103
- Water feature, less desirable route 1201
- Fairway with bowl 1202
- Lower slope 1203
- Grating 1205
- Jet mechanism 1206
- Ridge/curb 1207
- Hole 1208
- Water feature (shallow pond) 1301
- Platform (floating/solid) 1303
- Wall 1305
- Hole 1306
- Ramp 1401
- Fountain (upper level) 1403
- Chute from upper level 1405
- Water flow A, B, C
- Chute/trough from mid-level 1409
- Rain trees 1501
- Hole 1506
- Adverse flow 1701
- Fairway area 1702
- Grating 1709
- Long water feature about park, with path 1801
- Tee area 1802
- Green area 1808
- Water snake style jet 1901
- Water acceptor 1903
- Water snake 1905
- First vertical water feature, middle 2001
- Fairway area 2002
- Second vertical feature, middle 2003
- First vertical water feature, side 2005
- Second vertical water feature, side 2007
- Grating 2009
- Intermediate grating, side 2020
- Double angled obstacle 2101
- First water feature 2103
- Second water feature 2105
- Green area 2108
- Waterfall 2201
- Water feature (wading pool) 2301
- Sloped section of green 2305
- Hole 2306
- Water feature 2401
- Underwater tunnel 2403
- Trough 2501
- Intermittent water feature 2503
- Fairway 2602
- First vertical obstacle 2605
- Second vertical obstacle 2607
- Green 2608
- Grating 2609
- Water jet 2610, 2612
- Grating 2620
- Water feature 2701
- Fairway area 2702
- Waterwheel 2703
- Bucket 2705
- Hole 2706
- New style windmill 2801
- Water feature 2803
- Blade entering water 2805
- Water feature 2901
- Bucket 2903
- Offset support 2905
- Green area 2908
- Water feature 3001
- Dry caves 3003
- “Wave” of water jets 3101
- Fairway 3102
- Water feature, geyser/fountain 3201
- Fairway area 3202
- Manuel control of water 3203
- Water feature 3301
- Fairway area 3302
- Bridge 3303
- Pontoon/float 3305
- Wave maker 3307
- Water bucket 3401
- Fairway area 3402
- Offset support 3403
- Hole 3406
- Ball, deflected 3600
- Horizontal jet 3601
- Fairway 3602
- Wall 3603
- Sensor 3605
- Water feature 3701
- Windmill 3703
- Water feature 3801
- Fairway 3902
- Water feature (bubbling, boiling) 3903
- Green 3908
- Water feature on fairway 4001
- Fairway area 4002
- Water feature on green 4003
- Green 4008
- Water jet 4101
- Fairway 4102
- Sensor 4105
- Water feature, sideways jet/mister/geyser/nozzle 4201
- Wall/framework/arbor/gazebo/decoration 4203
- Light sensor/light source 4205
- Alternative (dry) path 4222
- Water feature 4301
- Mid-fairway slope 4303
- Banking wall 4305
- Grating 4309
- Tunnel 4401
- Light sensor/source 4403
- Gates (in closed position) 4405
- Gates (if open position) 4407
- Ramp 4501
- Net for hole 4503
- Water feature (pond) 4505
- Water feature 4601
- Green 4602
- Stairs 4607
- Platform 4609
- Water feature (sideways waterfall) 4701
- Walkable tunnel 4701
- Overhand 4703
- Water feature (side river) 4705
The geysers or fountains may be constant, requiring players to get their ball through them or suffer having the motion of the ball altered by the motion of the water, or the water features 11 may be spasmodic in operation. They may erupt randomly, or may be triggered by the presence of the ball or player in a first area of the course, and so on. They may also erupt in a pattern, such as a ripple pattern from one side of the fair way 12 to the other, forcing the players to successfully time their shots through the water.
Another aspect of the present invention is that it has features of a water park: the players may be required to bring swim wear or the like to gain admission, and to secure all electronics before playing, as the water features 11 may be arranged to douse the players as well as the ball. Alternatively, the players may have to pass the ball through but may have a dry path past the hazard, or the ball may stay dry but the players may get soaked, misted, sprayed, rained upon or the like.
Vertical feature (bump) 23c may be seen in profile, and it will be understood that for safety reasons this vertical feature may have alternative dry path which is a set of steps, so as to minimize the risk of accidents to people attempting to step on a wet sloped surface. Customers will not normally be allowed to walk on obstacles presenting tricky footing.
Hole 26 may be seen in profile.
River water feature 31 may be used with a ball which is able to float, that is which is lighter than water. While a standard PGA competition ball sinks, floating balls allow a stream to meander along carrying the ball easily visible to the player, who may not even have the end of the stream in view and thus may find themselves wondering where they are going to end up.
Alternatively, with clean water of shallow depth a player may see a ball which is heavier then water being rolled along the (clean, smooth) stream bed to its final destination.
Arrow 35 depicts the flow direction, which in this embodiment is toward the hole 36, not away from it. Thus, the water feature of the present invention is not necessarily classed as a water obstacle or water hazard, which renders it completely opposite in effect from passive water hazards.
Slope 33 adds an exciting element of skill to this process. If a player manages to hit the ball hard enough to avoid the problem of having the slope 33 roll it sideways into the stream 31, they may keep their ball on an advantageous track toward the hole 36.
Water tunnel 37 further increases the interest of the course as the ball may disappear from view for a moment passing under a decoration or in this case, under the fairway area. In addition, water tunnel 37 allows for a broader arrangement of courses with more interesting and varied terrain.
Outlet (grating) 39 is one example of a mechanism which may remove water (a water outlet) but which leaves the ball back in play, even on dry land. In addition to a grating, outlet 39 may be a netting, an artificial turf with no backing which allows water to pass between the blades of greed grass, a water permeable carpet, etc.
Stream 51 has angled wall 53, by hitting the bank shot off the angled wall the player avoids having their ball land in the water and the ball as a result stays on a fairly straight path toward the hole 56.
If the ball falls into the water feature, it will end up at areas 59a, 59b of the green area, which are depicted to be gratings or other water outlets. These areas 59a, 59b may not be as advantageous for the next putt as if the player had hit the angled wall 53.
Outlet 69, such as a mesh or screen, allows the ball to remain in play.
Plumbing arrangements for the golf holes of the invention may be carried out by a wide variety of means, such as gravity fed plumbing, pump pressurized conduits and the like. Such pumps may recirculate the water in areas having little water.
Water of the course of the invention may be chlorinated and otherwise treated as swimming pool water is treated, so as to render the invention a combination of golf course hole and water attraction. This of course may be an optional embodiment of the invention and may not necessary unless it is required by regulation or ordinance.
Hole 86 may be more advantageously approached after the water tunnel of exit hole 83 deposits the ball on the green, or less advantageously approached if the ball entered a different one of the plurality of exit holes/tunnels.
Water course 1101 is one of a plurality of water courses into which the player may direct the ball. Separator (island) 1103 may entirely prevent the waters of the plurality of streams or cascades from mixing, or it may allow them to mix to a limited or unlimited degree. At the end of the water courses, the position of the ball will be partially or wholly determined by the skill of the player in choosing the water course into which to putt their ball and the success of that effort to do so.
In use, players will have to hit their balls onto the platform with great care in order to not lose their balls into the water. If the wall 1305 is employed, the balls may instead remain on the platform. A wave maker may be employed to cause waves to break upon the platform or to even cause the platform to rock, as will be discussed below in regard to a barrel bridge embodiment.
The main principle of the invention is in fact the use of pressurized water in fountains, Ramp 1401 may loft a putted ball toward the fountain, which has fountain (upper level) 1403 as well as other levels, partitions, areas, divisions or flows. The chute 1405 from upper level 1403 will direct the ball by means of water flow C into one area of the green, either closer or further away from the hole than other parts of the fountain would deliver the ball.
Rain trees 1501 may be located so as to wet those entering low area 1503. Since the golf ball tends to obey gravity and roll to low area 1503, the player is likely to find themselves being forced to endure the rain to make their shot.
The bump may be provided to add to the merriment and difficulty level of the hole. Note that “trees” 1501 may be a roof, or decorations, an arbor, etc.
Adverse flow 1701 will quickly slow a ball after it leaves fairway area 1702, water from adverse flow 1701 may exit by way of grating/outlet 1709.
The length of the water feature 1801 is quite long compared to most miniature golf course holes. It may even pass about normal length golf holes, or even circumnavigate the entire water park, before coming to green area 1808.
First vertical water feature, middle feature 2001, propels a ball all the way upward from fairway area 2002/2602 to the green area (2008, 2608). For example, if the second vertical feature, middle 2003/2603, is a second hump, the first feature 2001 might propel the ball directly into the flow of a second feature, or might itself be strong enough or arranged so as to propel the ball all the way up.
However, first vertical water feature, side, 2005/2605 does not extend all the way to the upper level of the course. It extends only to intermediate grating outlet 2020/2620, and does not propel the ball into the second vertical water feature, side, 2007/2607. Thus here it functions as the first step in a two stage water-elevator, forcing the player to putt the ball again from intermediate grating, side, 2020/2620, into the second side water feature, 2007/2607, to finally reach grating 2009/2609.
Double angled obstacle 2101 allows a player to ricochet their ball, banking it in a selected direction, into either first water feature 2103 or second water feature 2105. These then deliver the ball to different parts of green area 2108, due to arriving at different water outlets.
Players of course will have the opportunity to walk down a set of steps beside the waterfall.
Water feature (wading pool) 2301 surrounds the green area. The green area in turn is partially or wholly made up of sloped section of green 2305 with hole 2306 disposed therein. A ramp may be provided from the fairway area toward the hole or not.
Water feature 2401 has multiple underwater tunnels such as underwater tunnel 2403 which arrive at different parts of the green area.
Water feature 2701 accepts balls from the fairway area 2702, which is actually lower than the green area. Waterwheel 2703 may rotate and carry along with it bucket 2705, which fills with water at a low position, and with it brings the ball into the bucket. At a higher level the bucket may tilt and empty, allowing the ball to approach or enter hole 2706.
New style windmill 2801 may be situated by or over water feature 2803 with blade entering water 2805, which in turn may be used to alter the motions of the ball as it is carried along by the water flow depicted by the arrow.
The bucket may empty water and balls into green area 2908. With several buckets available, the ball may be delivered to several different parts of the green area 2908 depending on which bucket it entered.
Water feature, geyser/fountain 3201 may wet fairway area 3202 and players thereon.
Manuel control of water 3203 (
Water feature 3301 may support fairway area 3302 on a floating pontoon bridge 3303. Pontoon/float 3305 may provide the support for the for the bridge.
As the bridge will bob in response to players of various weights stepping upon it and moving about, and as the balls on the fairway on the bridge may roll about as a result.
Wave maker 3307 as shown in
Water bucket 3401 is located so as to douse fairway area 3402 and thus alter the course of a ball in motion, thus encouraging players to attempt to time their putts during the time the water feature fills the bucket.
Offset support or mechanism 3403 may be provided to allow the bucket to empty.
For added amusement effect, the nozzles or misters may be concealed inside of foliage, decorations, etc.
Water feature, sideways jet/mister/geyser/nozzle 3601 may obviously be any of a variety of mechanisms. Fairway area 3602 thus becomes a zone in which a person is highly likely to become wet during the course of play. Wall/framework/arbor/gazebo/decoration 3603 may support both the water mechanism, as well as light sensor/light source 3605. Sensor 3605 may detect the ball and cause the jets to begin firing either intermittently, in a pattern, or otherwise.
An alternative (dry) path may optionally be provide a dry route to the hole, for those who do not wish to get wet. This alternative embodiment may be applied to any hole of the invention. However, it is anticipated that players and golf course designers will desire holes which do engage the players with the pressurized water features as actively as possible, so this is merely an alternative embodiment.
Kayakers and other water sports fans know that a “boil” of water in a river, also called a “haystack” or other names, may cause extremely unpredictable motions of objects passing through.
Water feature 4001 on fairway 4002 may make play across the fairway area 4002 while water feature 4003 on green 4008. This feature may use swirling or turbulent water to make a ball hit into the water move in extremely unpredictable ways.
Water feature 4301 cooperates with mid-fairway slope 4303 which may cause balls to enter the water feature 4301 if balls are hit slowly, however, by making use of banking wall 4305.
Outlet 4309 may be positioned so that allowing the water feature 4301 to carry the ball will leave the ball in a less desirable position then if the player makes the shot.
Tunnel 4401 may have light sensor/source 4403 such as a laser and a light sensitive cell, which when actuated may change gates (in closed position) 4405 to gates (in open position) 4407.
Ramp 4501 (
Water feature (sideways waterfall) 4701 has a walkable tunnel 4701 (number not correct) passing underneath overhang 4703 from which water feature (side river) 4705 flows toward the green area.
The disclosure is provided to allow practice of the invention by those skilled in the art without undue experimentation, including the best mode presently contemplated and the presently preferred embodiment. Nothing in this disclosure is to be taken to limit the scope of the invention, which is susceptible to numerous alterations, equivalents and substitutions without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. The scope of the invention is to be understood from the appended claims.
Claims
1. An improved miniature golf course hole for use with a golf ball during a course of play in which a player is putting the golf ball about a tee-off area, a fairway area and a green area, wherein the improvement comprises:
- providing pressurized water and using the pressure of the water to alter the motion of such ball during such course of play.
2. A miniature golf course hole for use with a golf ball by a player, the golf course hole comprising:
- a water feature, the water feature having pressurized water, the golf course hole having a layout, the layout designed so that while moving, the ball will enter the pressurized water and the pressurized water will alter the moving of the ball,
- the water feature having pressurized water being one member selected from the group consisting of: jets, sprayers, misters, cascades, waterfalls and combinations thereof.
3. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the alteration of the moving of the ball further comprises:
- one member selected from the group consisting of: retarding the ball, randomly altering the moving of the ball, providing alternative water routes of advancing the ball, and combinations thereof.
4. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the water feature comprises: a stream which moves such ball in a manner selected from the group consisting of: advancing the ball, retarding the ball, randomly altering the moving of the ball, moving the ball to a first portion of such green area.
5. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein such ball further comprises: a floating ball, and the water feature further comprises an outlet which allows the water to depart but strands the ball out of such water feature, the outlet further comprising: a grating, a net, and combinations thereof.
6. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the water feature further comprises: a fountain having a first water-filled level with water flowing out of the first level, the water flowing out of the fountain in at a first direction.
7. The miniature golf course hole of claim 6, wherein the fountain further comprises a second water-filled level with water flowing out of the second level in a second direction, such ball flowing out of the fount in the first direction if the player hits such ball into the first level and flowing out of the fountain in the second direction if the player hits such ball into the second level.
8. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the water feature further comprises one member selected from the group consisting of: a waterfall which such ball must be hit through, a waterfall which such player must pass through, cascades which alter the motion of such ball by passing it across a plurality of obstacles within the cascade, terraces down which the water carries such ball, and combinations thereof.
9. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the water feature comprises: one member selected from the group consisting of: a portion of the fairway which is afloat, a portion of the green which is afloat, a barrel bridge, a wave maker and combinations thereof.
10. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the water feature further comprises:
- a stream carrying such ball for a first distance, with a walking path beside the stream for the first distance, so that such player may walk beside such ball as it is carried.
11. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the water feature further comprises:
- at least one water tunnel which such ball passes through while in such water.
12. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the hole further comprises:
- a vertical obstacle over which the water feature propels such ball.
13. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the water feature further comprises:
- a trigger mechanism which actuates the water feature upon one member selected from the group consisting of: random actuation, timed actuation, actuation by entry of such ball into a first part of the water feature, actuation by entry of such player into a first part of such hole, and combinations thereof.
14. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the water feature further comprises:
- a waterwheel having at least one bucket disposed so that the bucket may move to a low position in which the bucket retrieves such ball from the water feature and a high position in which the bucket releases the ball out of such water feature.
15. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the water feature further comprises:
- at least one member selected from the group consisting of: buckets which periodically fill and tip over to flood the fairway, buckets which periodically fill and tip over to flood the green, buckets which periodically fill and tip over to advance the ball and combinations thereof.
16. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the water feature further comprises: a mechanism which shoots the ball using water.
17. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, wherein the water feature further comprises: at least one water gate which has a first position in which the water gate allows water to flow through and a second position in which the water gate prevents water from flowing through.
18. A miniature golf course hole for use with a golf ball during a course of play by a player putting such golf ball into a cup, the golf course hole comprising:
- a water feature which wets the player during such course of play and not after putting such golf ball into such cup.
19. The miniature golf course hole of claim 18 for further use by a second player, wherein the wetting of the player during the course of play further comprises one member selected from the group consisting of: requiring the player to wade in water, triggering fountains to wet such player, triggering sprayers to wet such player, wetting such player when the player follows their ball into an area of spraying, requiring such player to pass through a waterfall, requiring such player to pass by a water feature controlled by such second player, allows such player to choose between a dry route to the green and a wet route to the green, and combinations thereof.
20. The miniature golf course hole of claim 2, further comprising:
- a second water feature, such player having the choice to attempt to hit such ball into either of such water feature or such second water feature, the second water feature altering the motion of such ball in a manner different from the first water feature.
Type: Application
Filed: Mar 25, 2014
Publication Date: Oct 1, 2015
Inventors: Larry D. Bartz (Morrison, CO), Sharon L. Arcand-Bartz (Morrison, CO)
Application Number: 14/225,370