Today, a few mates and myself availed ourselves of the excellent winter deal Huntercombe is offering. A round of golf and a slap up breakfast for £30. We had wonderful sunshine and the full force of a half club wind.
Until now I didn't pay much attention to Philip Gawith's pleas for taking out trees to make the course more playable. I haven't changed my mind because I lost several balls today. In fact, I didn't lose several balls. What has converted me is the lack of sunshine on the course. With a low sun the trees leave ghostly shadows which really make photography a difficult task!
I was even more impressed this time around with the subtle strategy of hollows and bunkers in relation to slopes on greens. Every hole has some combination of the above which make proper tee shot position an advantage. In addition, Huntercombe's greens as a set are very clever and varied.
The 2nd. A seemingly simple hole which can easily bite you in the ass.
The 3rd from wedge range. This is quite possibly the best hole on the course. The photo doesn't do justice to how severe this green is. The slope from right to left has to be four feet. The fence is backed with chicken wire. Even so the lies down there aren't clever. A cracking hole in which par (nevermind that the hole is a driver wedge for many) is a good score for any level of player.
Another cracking green, the 4th. Again, this photo doesn't quite show how much the green moves from left to right. The steep incline between the two sections has to be four feet. You can see that the pin looks very short!
The wonderful start to Huntercombe continues with the par 5 6th hole. Several of the Huntercombe Hollows feature on this hole.
The short 7th from the ladies tee. Shades of Kington! I think this is the best par 3 on the course. It would be great if the green extended forward into the neck of the mounding.
Judging the distance on this hole is tough because the mounding starts so far in front of the green.
An unusual (for Huntercombe) cross bunker complex at #11.
The very cool 13th. The target is difficult to pick out because fairway blurs into the green. This also has one of the best greens on the course. It runs narrow and diagonally from left to right away from the fairway and has a long oblong mound running through the middle. Another one of Huntercombe's most unusual greens.
The third to the par 4 14th.
A sideview of the short 15th. This is another of those greens with a sharp drop from the fairway leading to the green.
The 17th is a 270ish par 4 which begs the golfer to go for it even though the chances of running the gauntlet is poor.
Huntercombe is a lovely course that demonstrates how challenging a hilly 6100 yard can be without resorting to trick golf. The greens are certainly lively, but run true and quick - three putting must be routine in the summer months. Any possible offer of hosting Philip makes should be taken up without hesitation. I give Huntercombe a 5.6 on the SRA Scale and think it could possibly score higher if I knew the course better.
Ciao