Generally speaking, Hawaii does not offer the variety of golf that is favored in the tree house. The shortcomings have been discussed ad nauseum on this website.
Some of the chief complaints:
-It’s quite expensive for visitors
-The Bermuda grass is too sticky to accentuate the ground game.
-The courses are often designed around residential and resort developments, with the desire for a cohesive and walkable routing for the golf course falling well down the priority list.
-The routings are often gerrymandered to create a post card par 3 near the ocean at the expense of several subpar connector holes coming to and from the coast. The Prince Course could be used as an example of this, to some extent, with the 7th hole providing the “signature” coastline experience while the 6th and 8th circle a housing development.
-etc., etc.
Nonetheless, Hawaii’s landscapes are simply astonishing and quite unlike what golfers experience on the mainland. Exploring those landscapes should be a priority for any Hawaiian course, in my opinion. Thus, for all its strengths and weaknesses, I appreciate that the Prince Couse immerses golfers in one of the world’s most spectacular rainforests, and it does so while also offering a healthy share of engagingly strategic golf holes. Mind you, average golfers are sure to lose more balls than they might in a more golf-friendly environment (e.g. Pinehurst), and the poor suitability of the course for walking does rob some majesty from the journey (who explores the Grand Canyon in a speedboat?). Still, I enjoyed my round and I found several holes worth highlighting, particularly on the inward 9.
Here are the holes I found noteworthy:
10th hole: 456-588 yards.
Staying down the left off of the tee will bring the green into range for the second shot.
From this angle, a carry of 200 yards over the chasm will dance.
Layups involve some decision making. This bunker 150 yards from the green’s center marks the inside of a very sharp turn in the fairway.
The ground is very uneven for the last 100+ yards of the approach.
A dedicated pro will make mincemeat of this hole, but hacks are likely to stage some fun matches over the length of this par 4.5
More will follow…