It is 7 am on my 48th birthday and I awake to figure out I am already late meeting Joel to travel to Crystal Downs.
Playing 45 holes of golf and then going straight to bed is apparently the best way for me to sleep soundly. I call Joel and fuzzily try to explain I will be late. After an initial moment of panic, Joel calms down and agrees to meet me at the course. I check out of the Knights Inn and hit the road.
The drive to Crystal Downs from Traverse City is lovely. What was not so lovely was the fact I had not turned on the sound on my phone which meant I was not getting voice directions from the GPS. I missed the turn, detoured through some forests and found the place.
We were privileged to play with head professional Fred Muller and three caddies on a lovely day with light breezes out of the North. Unfortunately I lost all sense of coordination and Joel crushed me in our match. I did however gain revenge in the afternoon to avoid being bagled for the trip.
I am not sure how much additional insight I can provide on the course compared to what has been written by others. I found the bunkers to be unique in that they (1) featured a local sand that seemed to work well and seemed natural; (2) they were not overly deep but very difficult in part because they tended to slope with the natural surrounding land. Hitting from uneven lies out of bunkers signficantly compounds the challenge.
The greens actually seemed a bit tamer than I expected and Mr. Muller kept commenting on how they were a bit slow that morning. They seemed the perfect speed to me in that they were very difficult but the player had a chance with most putts to do something reasonable. There was often a huge advantage available if one hit the tee ball on the more favorable side of the fairway, but the more favorable side usually involved overcoming danger in one form or another.
I took one picture, of the 17th - which is a hole that generates conflicting opinions. I liked the hole - it plays around 330 yards and features three saddles into which one can place the tee ball. From there you have a sharply uphill pitch to a green sitting at a high point that is essentially a tilted upside down cereal bowl.
It was a great thrill to play Crystal Downs.