What's the nearest accessible course to your home that you have dissed? You know the one you've driven by, or heard of, but can't be bothered to stop in to try, because, you know...reasons. What are going to do about it, anything?
Course: Dutchaven Golf Course
Distance: 23.6 miles
Reason: It's a patch of holes on the side of the road that looks uninspiring when I've driven by.
Why this a bad reason: Mostly because my home course that I love and played far north of 50 times in 2019 is otherwise an uninspiring patch of flat holes.
Action: I'm going with that I will actually go give it a try come spring, with the most likely time being some Saturday afternoon when my course has one of the few outside events that I prefer not to play.
Anyone else?
Not much of note has happened since this post so a quick update....
Saturday afternoon I found my way to Dutch Haven. $15 for 9 walking.
This is the kind of course you love when there are no other courses you can get to.
It should be the kind of course a beginner would enjoy. 3 par 3’s, 4 par 4’s under 300 yards, 2 par 5’s under 500.
Sigh...
A round at Dutch Haven suggested many nicknames for the course...
Home of the 150 yard par 3
Home of the sentinel tree short par 4
Home of the top shot pond
Home of the shrunken Ross green
Some observations:
1st hole presents a half-blind 150 yard par 3 to a tiny yet severely contoured green.
2nd has a nice mound obscuring the preferred line on a par 5. Playing away from the mound is safe: there’s an acre of fairway out there but the thick brushy woods by the green now come into play. Generous but crowned green.
3rd presents a 150 yard par 3 to a generous green.
4th is a 290 yard dogleg 4. Dogleg turns left at 210 as fairway enters a tree lined grotto. Moderate sized crowned green is protected by a cavernous and unseen bunker at the back.
5th Introduces the first of The sentinel trees. 200 yards out a massive oak stands just right of the direct line on the 250 yard 4. The forward tees around 130 feature a top shot pond. Take the you beginners! Green sits at a nice angle to fairway and is the size of a modest deck.
6th gives us a par 5 to the worlds smallest two-tiered green without a Windmill. If the designer had Bill Mitchell’s golden book of proportionate golf course design he was reading it upside down. Seriously the tiers were generously 12x12 and there was a severe roll off on the right side.
6th also had a narrow fairway requiring a plus 200 yard carry to reach.
7th gave us 2 sentinel trees 100 yards from the tee. The suggested shot that would reach the fairway was a draw through the shoot. Green was protected by hairy mounds immediately against the green front.
8th presented a blind dogleg on the 250 yard hole. By blind I mean there was a sentinel tree out about 190, directly on the line of instinct. This sat left of a hidden pond, which was left of the intended line of charm, a hidden fairway.
9th finished with a 150 yard par 3 to a crowned 15 foot wide green. Shots well left risked a deep bunker. Shots just left had rough.
Dutch Haven should be a rural course that provides a pleasant diversion for high handicappers. I fear though it demands a level of precision few who play it possess. For those learning the game it’s lesson must be unrelenting servings of frustration.
That said the trash receptacles were brimming with malty empties. If I played here regularly I would concur: anaesthetics are highly recommended at the Haven.
But ask me if I am glad I played and the answer is most assuredly yes!