I had a ball on Monday at Stephen Kay's Links at Union Vale. Had a nice time playing with Stephen himself at Manhattan Woods on Tuesday...there were some nice things there, but there was some really cool architecture at Union Vale...two other pluses: it's public and it's cheap:)
After a tepid start - a mundane opener, a quirky par-5 2d hole, a mild version of a Redan at 3, and an ordinary 90-degree dogleg at 4, the course heats up big time.
5 = short par-4 with great green divided by a hog's back! It's really two small greens, so even though you have a wedge in your hands, it's a tough shot, and if you miss, it's a tough up-and-down or two-putt:
![](http://i42.photobucket.com/albums/e302/jaygolfusa/5green.jpg)
Look at the beautiful thumbprint in the green at the par-3 7th!!!
![](http://i42.photobucket.com/albums/e302/jaygolfusa/7green.jpg)
cool mound in front of the green at 11 actually extends into the green and sheds approach shots!
![](http://i42.photobucket.com/albums/e302/jaygolfusa/11.jpg)
Nothing special architecturally, but I joked to my playing partner, a recent college grad that, "if you hit the silo, you win a free bag of feed!" Unintentionally, he nailed it! Whap! Hysterical...
![](http://i42.photobucket.com/albums/e302/jaygolfusa/15.jpg)
Stephen calls this hole - which he has repeated elsewhere - a "Trinity Hole." As a Bantam grad, I won't complain...
![](http://i42.photobucket.com/albums/e302/jaygolfusa/16trinityhole.jpg)
And a nice message to all my Irish friends...
![](http://i42.photobucket.com/albums/e302/jaygolfusa/1000thanks.jpg)