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When you get to #5 play a tee shot from the left, center and right tees. It is perhaps the finest short par 3 I have played. You can play the hole from 3 distinct angles and have 3 very different shots.
Quote from: Jerry Kluger on August 25, 2014, 09:00:23 PMWhen you get to #5 play a tee shot from the left, center and right tees. It is perhaps the finest short par 3 I have played. You can play the hole from 3 distinct angles and have 3 very different shots. You like 5 better than 3?I like hitting my tee shot from the far left teeing ground on 5 and then immediately turning around and teeing off from the exact same spot for 6. Then walking to the green to putt.
Stay hydrated too--I played this same time last year and it was over 100 degrees
Take a moment on each hole to take in the views. It is pretty stunning. I regret not taking my DSLR camera. Would have been worth lugging it for one round to get some quality shots of the holes and topography. Enjoy the great golf there.
While playing I realized there was a significant asymmetry in how penal the left side of the driving zones were compared to the right side. Hole after hole slight misses left had the potential for disaster while many misses right turned out ok or at least not nearly as bad. There was much more hidden/unseen fairway on the right side of the course and the primary rough on the right tended to be wider 10-15 yards in many areas versus 3-5 yards on the left side. I am very interested if this asymmetry was intended architecturally.
Tim, My first visit was in June and all of the members I played with kept commenting on how uncommonly thick the native areas were at that time. I've heard it's been even wetter since and they've thickened up a bit more. I found it more than my fair share of times, but I didn't lose many balls. Recovery options from the junk were limited though - just get the ball back in play. When the fairway widths were taken into consideration it didn't seem overly penal.
Interesting about the lost ball / lack of recovery comment from off the fairway. If be interested to hear from a member or two if it is thicker than usual this season from all the rain you mentioned or just a different perspective. I have been out on 3 or 4 occasions and spend a lot of time off the fairway and find a high percentage of my balls. Sometimes it might take two shots to get back to the fairway but other than the random shot that lands in the middle of a yucca I have never found the recoveries to be too bad.If it is that severe this season that is definitely a difference. Have you played a number of courses with that type of terrain and vegetation off the fairways for comparison?