About four years ago I was on a golf trip with four friends. We were touring western Virginia and West Virginia. Outside Roanoke we played a wild and outrageous golf course. It had recently opened and was still a little rough around the edges, but we were awed by its natural beauty and stunned by the quality golf that ran throughout its undulating 18 holes. The golf course is laid out on 370 acres of heaving and, for the most part, treeless holes. Now some four years on, Ballyhack has matured into an outstanding club and exceptional course. Those lucky enough to have played it will not soon forget its large turbulent greens or the oversized fairways and bunkers. Lester George’s daring design rewards good shots but a wayward shot will be chastened. Because Ballyhack is on such a large piece of ground the scale is enormous and grand.
Wade Whitehead and I, with Lester George chiming in here and there, will do a hole-by-hole tour of the course. It should be interesting because Wade and I play very different games. I am short off the tee and old. Wade is long and young. I play to a six and Wade is about a one.
Ballyhack has seven cottages and the welcoming clubhouse is a short cart ride away. Each cottage sleeps four.
The trip to the first tee lets the player know what is in store as most of the front nine is in view.
This view looks back on nine and on the left are seven and eight.
This view is of the par four sixth.
Hole 1: par four--249 from forward tees and 399 from back tees. 321 and 349 from the tees most use. Plays uphill.
The first hole looks much more daunting than it is. But that is true of much of the course. The carry is not nearly as long as it looks and the fairway is wide. If, however, you are too far right and short the second shot is blind. I usually try to hit it to the middle right for the best angle, especially if the flag is back left.
The look back toward the tee from the landing area.
The second shot is decidedly uphill and the green has a large false front. The top of pin is barely visible on the left side of the picture. The right side does not have as large a false front and I will sometimes hit it there but it leaves a long putt. I usually hit three more clubs than the yardage would dictate. I don’t get the ball as high as I used to, and if I go towards the left side of the green it is a more difficult shot for me.
You have to be pretty far afield to be in this bunker, but my buddy was a daring explorer this day.
Like most greens complexes, there is a lot of movement, undulation, and slope.
The look back is just splendid.
The walk to the next tee gives the player a glimpse of what is to come. In view here is the fifth green, the sixth fairway below, and the ninth fairway.