At this halfway point, I would love to report to Tiger Bernhardt, et al, that one of Sweden’s finest sights was there to greet me with a warm pastry and coffee when I got to the halfway house, as truly the Swedish women are, as a broad generalization, gorgeous as advertised. Unfortunately, they were safely ensconsed back in their villages, and resisted the opportunity to come out and laugh at the American. This lovely halfway house was, therefore, “ABSTANGT”
Shallow, circular bunkers??? Where have I seen these before???
#12 is one of the signature holes on the North Course, and I would agree that it is a very fine hole. Perhaps I am happy I didn’t have to play it! 444 yds from the back tee, gently uphill swinging right to left off the tee…
… then barreling downhill over a creek to the green, which is also protected left and back by another creek/pond. From the club’s Website, this is what the approach is supposed to look like:
Something was different today, perhaps the green had just been mowed???
Really a beautiful green surround, though, and I think everything rolls methodically back toward the water…
One of the joys of discovering a new course is seeing if one can define the dominant terrain and roll-offs and see if there are any hidden slopes. See if you can determine which way is the dominant slope in this picture…
Now here’s your dilemma…
You’ve just walked 12 holes in the pouring rain out to the furthest point on the course. You have to get past that raging river to get to the final 6 and back to the clubhouse, or retrace your steps (which weren’t all the dry anyway!!) to go back…What to do, what to do, what to do….
C’mon, this is GCA and I have a report to file! I soldiered on, although my methods will remain known only to me for now…
#13, 173 yd Par 3, looking back from the side, with the tee at the top right
Another fun-appearing par 3, with distance control on this uphill par 3 seeming to be the greatest challenge. Again, nice mix of par 3’s on the course, with the most well-known par 3 to follow…
The other stout par 5 is #14, 565 yds into the prevailing westerly wind. This hole goes straight out from the tee…
…until the 185 yds mark in, where one encounters a steep fall-off and rough-covered slope, essentially forming a ravine, which normally has only a thin thread of a stream running throughout it. This day, the “creek” required every measure of a broad jump that this endomorph could manage…
#15, 335 yd par 4…Who knew toward the end of this journey I would find a hole channeling the spirit of Shoreacres/Seth Raynor???
A wild SSS-shaped ravine system cut off this fairway at the 50 yd mark in, creating all kinds of wild recovery shots from short of the green—a real treat…
Here is the glorious 180 yd 16th, from the club’s website, a stunning downhill “drop shot” over a diagonal creek….at least it is supposed to be diagonal…
OK, what joker put the pin in the middle of the lake??? Perhaps this guy is going out to mark the “temporary green”??
The home hole, a dogleg right 400 yds par 4, is something of a let down after the pretty wild and woolly back 9. I suspect they will not have to deal with the standing water during the 2007 Solheim Cup in September…
However, I was not the only fool on the course this day. Note the flash of red over on the practice green!
I was going to ask this gent to join me for a beer so that we could chat about his course, but he said he had to leave when his dad was done cleaning up the pro shop, and that—at 7 years old—he wasn’t allowed to drink anyway! How can you not smile at a kid enjoying slopping around the practice green without a care in the world! That kind of fun is universal, no matter what the age or what the country…
Thanks for allowing me to indulge you with the silly tale of my afternoon on the North Course at Halmstad GolfKlubb. In all seriousness, I got a feel very similar to the Orchards Golf Club in Massachusetts, or one of the other New England-type courses. The greens, in particular, seem to have a lot of internal character, although I can’t say the bunkering was striking. Any further discussion seems ludicrous, given the nature of the day…