Walking’s a Breeze with Three-Wheel Golf Carts Three-wheeled golf push carts, and your own two feet, have become the transportation mode of choice for the serious-minded and health-conscious golfer. And for good reason. Walking saves money, not a bad thing in today’s economy. The ergonomically efficient design of the three-wheel push cart reduces the strain on the arms, legs, and back. And walking is healthy. Fitness experts calculate that walking 18 holes is comparable in benefit to a 45-minute fitness class. The 3-wheel push golf cart is much easier to use and requires far less energy than the 2-wheel cart. You’re able to walk with a natural gait. There is less fatigue involved when your hands are in front of you rather than having one hand stuck out behind you. The roll is super- smooth. Walking gets you more in tune with the game and closer to the golf course itself. It is a more focused and aware experience using a push cart across the terrain as opposed to hopping in a motorized golf cart. You have time to take in the surroundings, see and feel the lay of the land and learn how the various holes are best approached. Walking with a push cart allows you to gain an appreciation for the nuances of a golf course that is just not available from a riding golf cart. You feel the incline and get an intuitive sense of when elevation affects club selection. In just the last few years, golf push carts have been revitalized. Sun Mountain introduced the first three-wheel design in 1999 with the Speed Cart, turning the traditional two-wheel pull cart concept into the drastically improved push cart trend. In 2008, the Bag Boy Company introduced the Mini GT push cart. It received that year’s Golf Europe Product Award at the International Trade Fair for Golf held in Munich, Germany, for being the most innovative pushcart of the golf season. Bag Boy’s Mini GT has a low center of gravity for a stable and easy effort on all terrains. Its simple push-button folding mechanism collapses the cart to a remarkably small 14 x 18 x 22 inches.