Building a bag? Keep it simple (and cut out the fluff)

I’m on Twitter more than I care to admit …

Occasionally, I find something that hardcore resonates with me.

THIS is one of those tweets …

Let me tell you a bit about how I built my first bag

I casually found disc golf forever ago – I was a teenager. So when I picked the sport back up in my mid-20s, I had a bunch of discs I figured “flew the same way.” As I became more serious with the game the second time around, I discovered bag-building – that it’s an actual thing.

At the time, there was a course near my home situated around a local university – more specifically, around the man-made pond at the center of campus. One year over fall break, the school drained the pond. Eager for new plastic, I waded through mud and collected 50-plus discs.

DGPT: Bradley Williams

Once I’d returned (or attempted to return) the discs with digits on the back, I was left with 30-ish frisbees. Instead of throwing them myself, I cleaned ‘em up and sold every last one to a local, brick-and-mortar retailer. On the spot, I then purchased the 12 discs I wanted for my bag.

Want an in-depth look at my research?

One video.

That’s all it took …

Granted, I did a bunch of other stuff, too.

What blog content was available at the time, I read. I watched some YouTube videos, too. Forum posts played a big role, but they often left me with more questions than answers. So, when I found Philo’s 2016 “In the Bag Video,” it seemed simple enough – I ran with it.

Still, my O.G. bag differed a BIT from Philo’s

Here’s what I was working with:

That was years ago – BEFORE I started Green Splatter

To date, my bag is nearly identical.

The Innova Teebird: My Original X2 Star Teebirds

I throw discs like crazy. I review discs like crazy. I consume disc-centric content like crazy.

If you’re just now starting the bag-building process or you’re starting over, I can’t recommend enough the point the headline of this piece drives home: Start simple – most molds are fluff.

Please understand that this article isn’t intended to be a commercial for Innova Champion Discs, either. I started with Innova, so I knew what to expect – that’s the sole reason I ran with ‘em. The above process works with virtually EVERY solid manufacturer in disc golf, though …

They all offer proven molds.

Do some digging online. Focus on the molds the “brand fans” won’t shut-up about. Then, armed with what you know works, fill in the gaps – this is where a bag becomes unique to you. For me, that meant the Rhyno and Gator stepping in to fill a pair of obvious voids …

The Innova Rhyno + The Innova Gator: X2 Color Glow Plastic

I love what I have.

Is the above the ONLY way to build a bag?

Of course not, but man – it’s a great place to start.

Have anything to add? Take to Twitter to let us know – we’ll actually (for real) get back to you.

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Lucas Miller

Lucas Miller is the founder and editor-in-chief of Green Splatter. When he’s not out tossing a Champion Rhyno in his native Utah, he’s watching true-crime documentaries with his wife, wrestling his twin boys and praying the Oklahoma City Thunder’s rebuild passes quickly.

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