#10/Par-4/440 yds. The first of a number of wide fairways coming up, the principal nose feature can't be flown, but a drive to the right side that flirts with the bunker peeking up from the hills and leaves perfect position.
There are so many options from here, but the severity of the pin location leads one to wonder what to the right of the green.
Shot further left and a little closer shows the front portion of the green slopes away, and the back banks up hard to the left. Probably the toughest green to hold given the wind, smallish size, club, and the exposed sun beating down. The view is the best on the course, an expansive take on what rural Middle Georgia should look like with pot bunkers
#11/Par-4/490 yds. More like 510 with the uphill, this was into the wind, but at least you can lash a driver. Left gives a better view, as you'll see the right side of the fairway obstructs the approach.
Beautiful flowing hill that obscures the bottom of the flag from the right. After so many pots before, one wonders what kind of unseen traps are over the ridge. After so many unseen hazards scattered, coming over the hill expecting pots and mounds and getting nothing made me instantly appreciate the chess game that LGC plays with the golfer.
Great shot showing one of the widest surfaces I've encountered. The contrast between the perched nature of 10 and the flowing undulations of 11 are what make LGC so cool. Literally three #10 greens could fit inside #11's contours.
Good shot showing the front table pin location. Hard to get to, especially since I didn't know it was there. I'll probably shoot 100 next time just out of fear of what I know now.
#12/Par-5/600 yds. There is just alot going on in the fairway of this hole. It looks like any shot to any place on the fairway will go bounding off into trouble, but its surprisingly flat once you get to your next shot.
This collection humps and the other trouble near it all are on the right side, so the ideal drive would finish left and leave a harder approach. I was okay with this angle, but the downhill nature of this hole fooled me - its much sharper than it looks.
Simple, relatively flat surface with some wicked stuff surrounding it. Bunkers, depressions, and dug out chipping zones. Anything behind the green has a good chance to roll into a lake.
#13/Par-3/175 yds. This is taken off the back of #10. It seemed like a no-bailout version of #8, if #8 had a huge ridge smack in the middle. My tee shot hit the ridge and kicked dead left ten feet, leaving a dicey putt off a back knob. This shows that "forward" tee, which is no easy shot.
Proper view from back tees
This shows the hump well, but the back right portion banks up more than is seen from the tee. On a second play I would probably go long to see if this would hold the shot on the hill.
#14/Par-4/373 yds. Great hole that swings left with the creek, I thought this hole would beg for a draw, but I'm not so sure the best spot is not nestled close to the right bunkers after looking at the green, which has some crazy stuff in it and a Raynor-style bunker behind.
This looks like go time with a wedge in hand, right? Wrong...
My ball hit five feet right of the pin, which sits on the back of an area the size of a small desk, and made a sound like it hit. Just one of the coolest green I've witnessed.
Another view behind the green showing the multiple fall-offs and the ridge that protects the flag. Nice edge on the flat bottomed bunker.
#15/Par-4/440 yds. This is one I wish I wouldn't have played from the red tees, because it not feasible to try to drive over the left bunker, which would give a great chance to cut off some serious distance. Just past are some roller-coaster humps that must be ten feet high.
Angled green with a pin sitting close to a depression that looks to gather a ball off the green. Another fine example of looking generous, but playing small with the contours. Unusual shaping to the right and on the left sides, but very fun an quite different from gentle hills of the region.
Side view of the green showing a unique front table and the depression. After air-mailing #6 and #12, I made sure to under-club this downhill shot by two. I'd rather take my chances with the chipping areas, as there is little room anywhere behind the green.
#16/Par-4/425 yds.Another tough looking tee shot with more room than is evident. The second bunker that you can see sand in was my aiming point.
This shallow green is banking from a flat grade up the hill towards the back bunker, while the right side, slope hard down towards the water. The right side looks like an infinity pool from the approach, where the back edge just disappears. The lie is flat.
Good shot showing how seamless the surround transition into sections of putting green. I received the break of the day when a blocked iron landed far to left - otherwise I would never venture in that front part of the green.
Side view showing the hard bank of the green. The putt from down right has to be drilled, and after a day of easing putts over contours, its hard to pull off to this pin.
#17/Par-3/218 yds. With no wind and no idea the scale of the back of the green, this looked deceptive. An over-club would either give a unmakeable downhill putt or would come rolling down the slope. This green reminded of some Engh stuff I'd seen, only bigger. I would not want to be short.
I couldn't get this huge green all in one shot, but it goes about three more feet up to the right.
A good hole with some cool earthwork ribbons on the right side and fronting, this tee shot left something to be desired. Just a fade over the middle of the green wall.
This approach area fit my eye perfectly the way it blended into the bunkers and sweeps into the bowls and hollows.
Once again a smallish green on a long par-5 with plenty of fall-off. I liken this to #2 wave crest, only smaller contours and wider. Seems like the whole green wants to fall off the hill to the left.
Another great day on the course, and a course architecturally I'm glad I got a chance to experience. Even without the money factor ($25) its the best in the area, but its so unlike anything in the Southeast I can think off outside of Engh at Reynolds Plantation or Dye. A must-see, and has knocked Mr. Young's Lane Creek of the top as the king of GA affordable golf.