Frustrated? Here are some short, step-by-step answers to common questions. We suggest reading at least the Basics section of this guide before venturing forth.
This section has very specific examples, because once you learn to sculpt a green, you'll find that you know how to use the Sculpt Tool to do any number of other things.
Before diving into these little tutorials, we suggest opening up an existing course (like Rancho), then immediately choosing Save As… from the File menu and renaming it something like "how do I..."; then you can mess around on the course worry-free. (That's how kids learn about computers so fast!)
How do I make a smooth, flat tee?
How do I move a tee?
How do I lay down a fairway?
How do I sculpt a fairway's terrain?
How do I plant a tree?
How do I move a tree?
How do I move a water hazard?
How do I make a river?
How do I slowly walk around my course?
How do I beam myself from hole to hole?
Coburn Haskell, with help from Bertram Work, an engineer at Goodrich Rubber Company, developed the rubber core for the modern Guttie golf ball in the late 1800s. (Although Duncan Stewart, a player at St. Andrews in Scotland, had made rubber-cored balls for his friend thirty years earlier, he never pursued it further.) Production of rubber-cored balls started in America in 1901.