Hillbilly tour rookie Joey Smith and yours truly daytripped down to the Tennessee River near Florence, Alabama for a round at Turtle Point Yacht & Country Club, a 1961 Robert Trent Jones, Sr. design that flies below the radar screen.
In addition to the spacious greens and runway tee boxes (which I continue to find visually appealing and highly functional) the hallmark of the course is an ingenious routing that takes full advantage of the long slope down toward the water and a small valley that cuts through the middle of the property.
Playing away from the river, nearly a mile wide thanks to Wheeler Dam, Jones quickly takes the player to the top of the property with an uphill approach at the doglet first and demanding one-shot second listed at 190 yards from the penultimate white tees but playing a fully 230 to a back pin. The third is a fantastic 439/461 straightaway par four paralleling the valley with a crowned fairway and single bunker guarding any approach from the left. Typical of the large greens, it is 43 yards deep. This is a simple, classic hole that would fit darned near anywhere in the country. The 4th is routed around the end of the valley and is the only hole on the course where the mature trees are claustrophobic with the correct line off the tee down the outside of the dogleg left. The 493/519 fifth requires a decent carry to the a plateau landing area, then the hole plummets right anda down into the valley with a nicely scaled pond protecting the front and left of the green. The prevailing wind off the lake and a slight downhill lie after a big tee ball makes reaching the green in two dicey. The direction of the routing is reversed at the 6th as the 380/435 yard hole plays up and out of the valley to a wingnut green, one of the few where the contouring is dramatic. The 7th turns back toward the lake along the opposite ridge of the valley with a crowned fairway that is difficult to hit. While the 12th at Augusta National Golf Club is often immitated, the 145/168 8th is as good a replica and I've seen with the green at a 45 degree angle running 44 yards from front left to back right with the green sited down in the valley. The 433/472 yards par four ninth plays directly at the river, tumbling some 50 feet downhill aabout 200 yards from the green.
Back nine to follow.