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Kirk Gill

Spring Valley -
« on: August 04, 2006, 11:00:04 AM »
I had a great day of golf recently playing with my son on his seventh birthday, his first round of golf ever. We played at a local course called Spring Valley in Elizabeth, Colorado. Designed by Ross Graves, the course is an inexpensive ($35 + cart, if you wish it) course in a somewhat wooded valley. It is walkable, with only one long walk between holes that happens to occur on one of the prettiest, flattest part of the property. I'll post a couple pictures of the course, although I don't know that the architecture will wow anyone. I liked the fourth hole a lot, a reachable par-4, but was really unimpressed with the par-3's, as all were fairly nodescript, to my mind. I'd be interested if anyone can tell me about Ross Graves, what he's done elsewhere, etc.

The par-three second from the tee

The 4th from the fairway

Greenside bunkering at the 11th (complete with tree)

The 17th from the forward tees

Rumpled fairway (the only one on the course that was really like that) at the 18th

The greens had some nice slope, and were fun to putt, but slow, although the entire course was pretty wet after some heavy rain the night before.
"After all, we're not communists."
                             -Don Barzini

Tom Huckaby

Re:Spring Valley -
« Reply #1 on: August 04, 2006, 11:04:25 AM »
Kirk - see the "where are you playing this weekend" thread and you'll understand why I particularly find those pics VERY cool.  Well done.  Heck of a swing on that little guy... and oh yeah, the course looks cool also.

 ;D

Interestingly also - we have a Spring Valley GC here - Milpitas, CA - and from the looks of things and your description, it's pretty darn similar to your Spring Valley.  Weirdly so.

TH

Tim Pitner

Re:Spring Valley -
« Reply #2 on: August 04, 2006, 11:25:29 AM »
It's been awhile, but I've been out to Spring Valley.  It's kind of a haul from Central Denver.  I remember the front nine being sort of humdrum, and the back nine being better, incorporating more of the cottonwood trees.  The back nine was quite good, as I recall.  I can't help you with Ross Graves.  Tom's right--your son has a good looking swing; I love his action on 17 tee.

Kirk Gill

Re:Spring Valley -
« Reply #3 on: August 04, 2006, 12:51:43 PM »
Thanks, Tom. And good luck in the tourney with your son !

Tim, he did not hit one shot off-line all day. Amazing.

And you're right about the course, the front nine sits unremarkably on the ground, and I especially disliked the first and ninth holes, separated as they are by a row of mounds.....I'm sure that this is done a lot, but here it is egregiously unattractive. The back nine is a lot more fun - routed through mature trees, but with several holes shoe-horned into the property. There's also a lot of new housing going up back there that will soon change the entire feel of the course.
"After all, we're not communists."
                             -Don Barzini

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