Fifth hole, 353 yards; “Billows”The fifth and sixth holes at Town & Country play on and over some of the most severe land forms on the property. While only 353 yards, the fifth hole is demanding in that it requires two quality golf shots to ensure a par. The tee shot plays through a chute of trees to a narrow fairway below. A successful tee shot only needs to find the top of the hill approximately 175 yards away from the green as balls will roll and find their way down to the bottom of the fairway.
The view from the top of the hill in the fairway shows the slope that most tee balls roll down and to the right toward the final resting place of most well struck shots. Club legend has it that Walter Hagen had laid up to this spot in past exhibitions as he claimed that he preferred to have a longer approach with the target visible versus being at the bottom of the hill for his approach with none of the putting surface visible. The picture below also illustrates the trouble that a player can find themselves if they spray their tee shot left or right.
The removal of a number of trees behind the fifth green in recent years has restored the skyline green feature at the fifth. After a well struck tee ball, a player is faced with this unnerving wedge shot to a target that consists of nothing more than a flagstick. Approach shots hit heavy have a habit of rolling back to the player’s feet, while shots hit over the green lead to a near automatic bogey.
This photo from just short right of the putting surface does not do the slope in the green justice. The green slopes severely back to front, with what amounts to a false front for the first 20% of the putting surface.
The below picture shows the limited room a player has over the putting surface.
While the following photo illustrates the punishment for hitting an approach shot just ten yards off the back of the green. Given the sever back-to-front nature of the green a bogey or even double bogey quickly becomes a good score on the fifth.
Sixth hole, 468 yards, “Boomerang”; After a number of moderately short holes to start the round, the player is presented with what is perhaps the most difficult hole on the course. At nearly 470 yards, most players hit a driver downhill toward the fairway.
After finding the fairway, the player will encounter this view from roughly 200 yards out for his second shot. For scale, see the approximately 2.5 to 3ft tall, white, 150-yard marker in the left center of the picture. The approach, while severe, is heroic and very exciting. The hill is tall enough that a high, well struck long iron or metalwood is required to carry the hazard.
Looking back from the top of the hill toward the tee.
At the top of the hill, the player is relieved to find that the approach is actually downhill toward the green.
The sixth green has a significant amount of internal movement which is dominated by a significant slope on the left portion of the green where the pin is located. The photo below also illustrates how now the 7th tee, 6th green, 13th tee, and 12th green are connected by fairway cut.
Looking back on the sixth hole from behind the green.