To my surprise, our site founder did a wee review (
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/courses-by-country/usa/heathlands-at-the-legends/) of this course back in 1999. I say, "my surprise" as I was uncertain that anyone had heard of the architect, one Tom Doak of the Michigan Doaks (or is it Connecticut?) Oh, never mind.
I was able to get four of the five planned rounds in at Myrtle Beach last week and have a fair amount of images to share. I'll begin with this particular track (
http://www.legendsgolf.com/heathland.cfm). Unlike to other dudes who give you glamour, glitz and other chismes, my review shall be barely boned, with emphasis on images. I'll do my best to describe them. If you have questions, post and I will answer them to the best of my ability. If still images don't do it for you, view their official video (
http://www.legendsgolf.com/heathlandvideo.cfm)
Hole #1 at Legends-Heathland is a four-shot hole. It can measure 447, 414, 374 or 362, depending on the deck you select. The hole plays fairly flat from tee to green and moves from left to right in a dogleg. A sod bunker breaks the visual monotony of the green fairway, drawing your gaze to the right. Sure, it tempts you to play the hole that way (ye olde line of charm, I guess) but there is a thick stand of brush just beyond that will get you a quick lost ball or unplayable lie. The proper play is left of the bunker (hard to miss too far left), from where a longer but safer shot in to the green will be the result. The approach shot is played at the first of 18 enormous greens, past a second bunker, twin to the first. Literally. Same size, same position on right side of fairway. This time, it's a distraction (unless you played up the right side off the tee). The green must be 70-90 feet wide; if you miss it laterally, you need to work on your aim or your swing path. Once you get there, let's hope that you can putt. You might have the first of many long approach putts. Have at it, have fun.
Above we have the tee shot from the back of the long tee. Gives you a sense of the vertical, horizontal and diagonal size of the fairway.
Above is the same shot, zoomed in a bit.
Above we now look from fairway center toward the green.
Above is taken from the right side, just past the intermediate fairway bunker (the one between the drive zone and the putting place.)
Above, this fifth image is behind the green, looking back up the fairway to the approach place. I am at the level below the putting surface, very typical here. Most greens have multiple run-off spaces from which to chip, pitch or putt.
Same angle as before, now standing on top of the green. Internal contouring comes into view.
Looking back at green site #1, from tee #2. This course would be a great one to use, conditions being proper, for preparation for links golf. Everything is wide and huge. Not simple, just wide and huge.