Quirky is very much a personal perspective. Growing up in Derbyshire, there are plenty of blind shots over hills, or shots over dry stone walls, or approaches to tiny greens. Then travelling further afield, to some of the UK’s older courses, there are again many features that someone used to modern “by the numbers” architecture, would certainly consider quirky, that for me are just great use of the existing features of the site, often forcing you to hit a shot differently than you would otherwise do so, or take more unusual strategic decisions.
JNC and Niall’s discussion of the 18th at Brora is a good example. A great finishing hole, and for someone like JNC who seems to love the quirky nature of UK courses, it certainly fits the bill, however to Niall or myself, its probably less quirky as we will have come across similar examples more often?
Anyway, I’d say 1 and 13 at North Berwick certainly fit the bill, but have been mentioned plenty (I’m with JNC in thinking the 1st at NB is a great start to the round), then there is the cops out of bounds on the 1st at Royal Liverpool. But below is my list of a dozen quirky holes, some are great architecture, some or bordering on the insane, but all are quirky to one degree or other…
3 at St EnodocThe 420 odd yards on the card don’t give any clue to what you will actually encounter. A blind downhill drive. At the far end of the landing area is a track and also a ditch with a copse before the hole doglegs to the left slightly.
13 at Burnham & BerrowNever really managed to get my head around this hole but I still like it. The old tee was better with its tricky semi blind shot, but the drive is still probably best as a fairway wood as a sandy track to the beach crosses the hole and theres no relief from it. Then a slight dogleg left, terrain gets interesting and narrow for the semi blind layup, then the green itself is almost 50 yards long and very narrow with a wicked hollow off to the right.
17 at PainswickCertainly the quirkiest hole on the course. Anywhere else and I’d think it was nuts, but it just about works at Painswick? A blind drive to a narrow landing area with a crossroads and out of bounds to the left!
17 at PennardNever managed to get my head around this one at Buda, in fact I cant remember even finishing the hole!
9 at Royal West Norfolk This is actually a very good hole but what makes it quirky for me is the approach over a tidal marsh. Not your standard links feature, and pics when its flooded, with the railway sleepers across the front of the green, look great, but not your typical links.
17 at AlwoodleyA drive over a public road to a pretty flat fairway, but then the blind approach is to a green set at the bottom of a slope. The aggressive line must take on the gorse bushes at the top of the slope.
4 at LindrickA short par 5 that doglegs to the right with the fairway running away from you a little. However the approach is to a totally blind green sitting down at the bottom of a slope, with a stream running around the back.
2 at Blairgowrie WeeThe approach to this shortish par 4 must get past 2 large pine trees standing guard at the front of the green. Probably too high to get a shot over them, the best bet is an aggressive drive cutting the corner to get down the slope close to the green, which will just leave a short bump and run beneath their branches.
3 at Gleneagles KingsThe uphill drive is to a pretty undulating fairway, but the approach is over a rather large hill, with the green on the far side.
15 at Boat of GartenOnly a short par 4, but a drive would end up at the bottom of a deep and narrow hollow, with heather al around. Best bet is to play it as something like two 7 irons, but you will not realise that from the tee as its semi blind and the hollow cant be seen.
16 at AskernishProbably one of the maddest greens I’ve ever seen, but I loved it! It’s a very narrow front upper tier, that sits high up above the fairway, then a drop off behind.
8 at Chevin, DerbyshireI decided to add one from my home county of Derbyshire, and there were plenty to choose from. “Tribulation” at Chevin is just under 400 yards but the drive is over a drystone wall, uphill to a hogsback fairway with a drystone wall left, out of bounds over, and a steep drop off right. The approach is then steeply uphill also. Many locals play a short iron to the start of the fairway to avoid a drive which if slightly off line will kick off the fairway either left or right into trouble. Pretty crazy, but its been there for 118 years, and is as much fun to play now as it was when I was a kid!
http://www.chevingolf.co.uk/pages.php/course_hole.html/054d3b28-67e8-11df-808c-001ec9b331b2/8.htmlCheers,
James