Gents:
Thanks to all of you who took the time and trouble to visit Roanoke and Ballyhack last weekend. It was fantastic to spend time with you and to help host the event.
The golf course certainly showed its teeth on Saturday. "25 mph" is conservative; the property over which Ballyhack tumbles is among the windiest in the Valley, but that morning's breeze was about as stout as I've seen there. Jimmy's ball on the fifth hole, which was hit perfectly to about 12 feet on a back tier, picked up motion well after we arrived at the greensite due to a huge gust. It finished almost off the front of the green, and that's with the protection of a small rise between the hole and the wind source!
The joy of playing the golf course in said conditions is that it reveals the beauty in its design. After just missing the sixth green, I was stuck between putting, pinching a sand wedge, running an eight iron, or bunting a five iron. On the eighth and ninth, we were faced with a suddenly-driveable par four and, then, a nearly unreachable-in-three par five.
Any golf course can have a great hole or two. What separates Ballyhack is that it's comprised great stretches of holes. Mike points this out by referencing 9-12, arguably its greatest consecutive set. However, when I talked with the other guys about the concept, each pointed out a slightly different favorite stretch. For one, it was the opening (1-3). For another, it was 5-7. I'm struck by this. Most people would answer "7-9" (or 7-10) when asked for Pebble's best stretch. 11-13 at Augusta gets a frequent nod under the same question. But at Ballyhack the answer isn't so simple. It's an attribute I think other GCAers will notice when they come out to play.
This is to say nothing of the service that is - and will be - provided by Jonathan, Aaron, and their staff at the club. Clubhouse construction is underway, and I believe its addition will add an entirely new level to the experience.
I'm planning to repeat and enhance this effort in the fall, when the Blue Ridge Mountains pop with color and when the course has had a few more months to mature and lock in. It gets better every day and will be unrivaled in the challenge and experience it provides its players.
Anthony, you make too much sense. Where are the photos, indeed? I had my camera on Sunday but only took a couple. I posted some last summer (
http://web.me.com/wadewhitehead/Ballyhack/Welcome.html) and will have to take more soon. Ballyhack is the most three-dimensional golf course I have ever seen. A 2-D medium just doesn't give a sniff of its scale or scope.
Keep your eyes open, everyone, for a fall gathering. We hope to see everyone there.
WW