About an hour in, he says: "We experience the highest highs and the lowest lows". No truer words have ever been spoken.
Good news that longs can perhaps hang their hats on is that the 2 hour and the 4 hour still have quite a good long look to them. ---The festering continues
I'm not going to watch a 2 hour or 2 minute YouTube video link. Sum it up in your own words mind the main points lessons wisdoms. I came here to ET to speak to authentic human beings not links and hype content.
Heading back down to Globex OR after bouncing then dropping thru Globex VWAP. Bear market bounces get sold.
We learn something new everyday. “ Flight of the Condor 18 July 2023 The following may sound unbelievable, but there were independent witnesses of all these events. In one case, they even saw what happened on the green! A 'condor' in golf is a score of four (4!) under par. This can be achieved by scoring a hole-in-one on a par-5 hole, or by taking two strokes on a par-6 hole, which are themselves as rare as hen's teeth. Golfing condors have been recorded six times around the world over the last 60 years in the USA, the UK and Australia. Until 2020, they were all par-5 'aces'. Larry Bruce 1962 Hole-in-one Par-5 on 5th Hope Country Club Bill Fields, writing in Golf World in 2004, credits Larry Bruce with the first known 'condor' in golf. In 1962, Bruce cut the dogleg on the 5th hole at the Hope Country Club in Arkansas. The hole is recorded as 480-yards, but obviously as a dogleg the drive would have had less distance to travel to the hole. Today, the scorecard shows 452 yards and the carry to the approach to the green looks to be about 250 yards. Dick Hogan 1973 Hole-in-one Par-5 on 8th Piedmont Crescent In 1973, scratch golfer Dick Hogan aced the 8th at Piedmont Crescent in North Carolina. At the time, it was a 456-yard par-5. As it was the 4th July and there were maintenance workers nearby, Hogan was never sure whether someone played a joke on him. His expressed doubts may have played a part in the fact that this score is missing from some lists of golfing condors. However, the ground was hard and the ball had certainly run to the green, as he said in 2013: - “We were in a dry spell and the fairway was red clay. The ball just never stopped rolling.” Shaun Lynch 1995 Hole-in-one Par-5 on 17th Teign Valley In 1995, Shaun Lynch hit a 3-iron off the tee on the 496-yard 17th at Teign Valley in Christow (UK). The next time he saw the ball, it was in the cup. He had cut the corner and, as he said, the ball “must have bounced on the hard ground and run and run.” Lynch was not sure what had happened and had played a provisional. The Club installed a plaque of the event and it is worth reading the recent comments of a member of club https://www.scottishgolfhistory.org/news/flight-of-the-condor/