No, you cannot take a stroke and remove the ball from a sand trap in Golf. If your ball lands in a bunker (sand trap), you must play it as it lies unless specific relief options apply. You can only remove the ball if it is unplayable, in which case you must follow the proper procedure for an unplayable lie, which involves taking a penalty stroke.
This is known as casual water. You are allowed to take relief, you do so as follows, drop the ball anywhere in the bunker, no nearer the hole. You do so unless the course manager has designated the bunker Ground Under Repair, in which case you get a free drop out of the bunker.
Tap the bottoms of your shoes with your club so the sand goes back in the bunker and then rake the bunker with the rake provided.
In order to remove sand from your phone first turn the phone off. Then take a can of compressed air and use it to remove the sand from the phone.
After you put if the ball is on the edge of the hole it has 10 seconds to fall in. If it falls in after that you must take another stroke.
You have to take the motor out!
You would get a one stroke penalty if you hit another ball and do not call it provisonal, because you cannot hit another golf ball unless it is unplayable.
If the person who played the ball think he/she cannot play the ball where it lies then yes the person may take a one stroke penalty and move the ball.
If you lose a ball in golf and are unable to find it within the allotted time, you must take a stroke-and-distance penalty. This means you add one stroke to your score for the lost ball and then drop a new ball in the original spot where you played your last shot. In total, this results in two strokes: one for the lost ball and one for the new shot.
You can eitherPlay the ball as it lies,Take a penalty (1 stroke) drop two club lengths from where the ball liesGo back, as far as you want, keeping the point where the ball is between you and the flag and drop it (1 stroke penalty)You can go back to where you played the last shot from, (1 stroke penalty).The above rules assume you find your ball, if you can't find it, you must use the fourth option.
Drill a small hole in the ball. Take a back out screw driver and pull it out.
You can play it, but you cannot ground your club unless you are in the process of playing a stroke. Go back as far as you like, keeping the point of entry between you and the flag and take a penalty drop, this costs one stroke. (If you take this option, you must take full relief so you cannot drop it in the hazard) And you must drop no nearer the hole. You can go back to where you played the original stroke from, this also costs a penalty stroke. You can use the drop zone if there is one, this also costs one penalty stroke. You don't need to retrieve your ball if you cannot reach it, or find it, you may play another ball, as long as you and/or playing partners saw or believe your ball entered the hazard.
Provided the ball does not land out of bounds, has been lost, and as long as it can be played, no reason under USGA prohibits standing on the cart path to complete a stroke.