#4 par four--467,447,411,379
The fourth hole is the most difficult hole on the course for me. I make more bogies here than any other hole. In fact, I make more doubles here than any other hole. That shouldn’t be surprising because it is the number one handicap hole as well. On most of the holes I will jump back and forth between tee markers. One of the most fun things to do at Ballyhack is to play from different tees. I had a friend at the course last week. We played 72 holes in two days. We never chose the same set of tees for the entire round. Instead we jumped back and forth. Not here. He always played the hole at 379 yards and I at 411. I have played the hole further back but it becomes a par five for me. The key to this hole is the tee shot. Hit a good one and you can have a short iron into the green. Hit one off line and you have an easy bogey. The fairway has a strip of rough bisecting it in half. In essence there are two fairways, an upper and a lower.
This is a view from the right side of the fairway (actually, near the second green). The upper fairway is the target, unless you can just bomb it over the nob in the center of the fairway/rough. A well struck ball will bound down to the bottom of the fairway and some 150 yards from glory. If, however, a tee ball is hooking it might go through the fairway into the rough and you have to decide either to lay up or chance hitting the shot over a large ravine. The lower fairway is more level than it appears on this photo and often a ball that is hit in the strip of rough will trundle down to the lower fairway.
I will aim at the white house or the nob in the fairway. If I hit is well I can carry the nob. Periodically I will lay back and leave myself 190 yards or so and not take the risk of running through the fairway. It is no bargain, however, because the shot into the green is pretty daunting.
Miss the fairway into the middle rough and you pitch out.
If you lay back this is the shot that is faced.
Hit a good drive and the second shot is anywhere from 160 to 130 yards. I think it is the most exciting shot on the golf course. The green has redan qualities. The green runs from right to left. The pin that is right and back is on a shelf, which makes a birdie putt makeable. For me it is the easiest pin. I can fly it just short of the green and let it bounce up. The pin that is left and long is tricky. Flying it all the way to the hole is not a shot I have. I have to hit the shot to the front of the green and let the slope take it to the hole.
I don’t think I have birdied the hole more than a handful of times. I have made many more doubles than birdies. When I walk off with a par I am thrilled.
Looking back and remembering the bloodbath that transpired.