Sidehill Gouger - Sidehill Gouger Sidehill Gougers are mythological creatures said to inhabit the Rocky Mountains of British Columbia. Little is known about the nature of the Sidehill Gouger as they are a rare and reclusive species, but they have one distinctive feature upon which all Sidehill Gouger spotters agree; the legs on one side of their body are significantly shorter than the legs on the other side of their body. This unique arrangement is due to the habitat of the Sidehill Gouger, grazing on the grasseses and other vegetation of mountain slopes. They almost never come down to flatter terrain where they are unable to run well. Sidehill Gougers are believed to come in two main varieties, the left-handed Sidehill Gouger and the right-handed Sidehill Gouger (see: chirality)..
List of fictional species - Ogre Oni Orc Phoenix Pixie (or Pixy) Polevik Pooka, see Puck_(mythology) Redcap Ri Roc Salamander Satyr Sea serpent Seelie Sidehill Gouger Simurgh Skvader Sluagh Spriggan Squonk Taniwha Tarasque Troll Trowe Unicorn Vampire Werewolf Wight Wyvern Yeti Zombie Youkai Individual Creatures Bahamut Fenris Kujuta Leviathan Minotaur Ouroboros Pegasus Slepnir Thunderbird National Fictional Species (folktales, talltales) Many nations around the world have mythical animals which are widely believed not to exist and for which there is little or no scientific evidence, but which are nevertheless well known and, in a sense, popular. Some animals on this list are treated more properly by cryptozoology, where there has been a belief that they are real. Note that the creatures listed below are unofficial fictional national animals and that the tales told about them differ a.
Hodag - three somewhat different incarnations of this creature. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Black hodag 1.1 Quote 2 Sidehill dodge hodag 3 Cave hodag 4.
Golf Instruction - grip, the interlocking grip, or the baseball grip, depending on the student's hand size and athletic abilities. Great ball-striking golfers all have great club position at impact and tremendous swing velocity, generated by correct application of the fundamentals. Golf instructors teach multiple types of standard shots, including driving, fairway shots, approaches, chipping, putting, and sand-shots. Advanced instruction can teach techniques such as controlling the "shape" of the shot, controlling loft, ball-stopping and spinning, playing off uneven ground or sidehill lies, and trouble shots such as hitting out of the woods. 30-minute, twice-weekly practice sessions are essential for developing muscle memory that allows the golfer to repeat shots. Instructors use a combination of physical conditioning, mental visualization, classroom sessions, club fitting, driving range instruction, on-course play under real conditions, and review of.
Trail - to walk the trail. An absolute limit for trail grades is a slope of one in six, and a more practical limit is a slope of one in eight. Trails that ascend steep slopes use switchbacks. If a trail is being made to be accessible to off-road wheelchairs, the slope should be no more than one in ten. If a paved trail has to be accessible to all wheelchairs, the slope must be no more than one in twelve, with periodic level pulloffs. The off-slope, or side-slope, of the trail also must be considered. This is the slope of the trail from side to side, and should never be more than one in twelve. Side-sloped trails are prone to gullying. Ideally, the treadway of the trail should be almost, but not.