Delamere Forest Back nine
The back nine is shorter than the front nine by some 250 yards. The front nine has five par fours over 400 yards. The back nine has none. What it does have are some of the most interesting holes on the course. The front nine is built on long sloping hills. On the back nine the terrain is more undulating and Fowler used the land ingeniously. Again, thanks to Mark Rowlinson for taking the pictures as we played.
The back nine begins benignly enough with a 378 yard par four that goes up a hill to plateaued green. You can either fly or bump it onto the green that slope from back to front.
The 11th is a straight away par five that goes up and then down to the green. My playing partner reached the green in two. The second shot is over a rise and then trundles down to the green. For mortal like me it takes three shots but the third is a short pitch,
View from the 11th green back up to the top of the hill from where the second shot is hit.
View of the 11th green from the right side.
12th green site of the 149 yard par three.
Thirteen is one of the shortest of the Par 4 holes but not one of the easiest, the green is protected by three bunkers across the front, one to the left and the ground falls away to the right and back.
14 is a fairly short Par Four from a Tee, set at an angle to the fairway over the hill to a small landing area, this leaves a short iron into the green. The ground around the green is humpy bumpy interesting.
15 may be the most unusual hole of the course. It is 300 yards long over a large gully to a raised green that actually sits in a hollow. It is not drivable but requires a short iron off the tee. In the winter it is played as a par three from the back of the 7th tee. I think it makes for a much better hole.
Second shot. A short iron to a blind green.
16 is a two hundred yard par three over a pond that really does not come into play. I don’t have a picture from the tee but this is the green
18 is a reachable dogleg par five dogleg to the right. A good chance to make a closing birdie before you retire to the comfortable grill room or the terrace.
Second shot
Now to the wonderful clubhouse and a drink, a sandwich and grumbling about tee shots hooked, second shots pushed, and putts missed.