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Sean_A

Re: Calling On CHURCH STRETTON GC
« Reply #50 on: Yesterday at 02:43:43 AM »
I set my Strava app going on the 1st tee at Church Stretton. With 740 feet of climbing involved, it is currently the hilliest golf walk I've done in the UK. By comparison, Welshpool is 546 feet, Cleeve 540, JCB 503, Kington 471 and Painswick 425.


Not done Strathpeffer Spa yet, which I've heard is a proper lung buster. Haven't measured my old Pennine haunts either.

Pitlochry is pretty hilly. The start is a killer.

Ciao
New plays planned for 2025: Wentworth Edinburgh, Machrihanish Dunes, Dunaverty, Dumbarnie, Gleneagles Queens and Carradale

Simon Barrington

Re: Calling On CHURCH STRETTON GC
« Reply #51 on: Yesterday at 03:20:15 AM »
Many hilly courses have a hole dubbed colloquially as "Cardiac Hill" given the raising of heart rate required to traverse them.

Bridge of Allan's opener, a long par 3 (223 yds) has a 40 degree uphill climb to the old stone dyke that crosses about 30 yards to the front of the green, fits the bill. The 1895 course is by Old Tom Morris and 9-Holes, originally with square greens and perpendicular dykes, there has been suggestion of later James Braid involvement.

Sadly, the local moniker became deterministic, as when playing a University game versus the Club back in the day, a club member suffered a heart attack and passed. Have always thought if one has to go, going while golfing might be apt. May he RIP.

Thomas Dai

Re: Calling On CHURCH STRETTON GC
« Reply #52 on: Yesterday at 08:32:20 AM »
Given the severity of walking CS I wondered if some of the routing plans were established by the architect(s) while riding on horseback?
Herbert Fowler is alleged to have done such at some places he worked. I wonder if others did too?
Atb

Forrest Richardson

Re: Calling On CHURCH STRETTON GC
« Reply #53 on: Yesterday at 05:23:39 PM »
In 2001 I wrote about Chruch Stretton in Routing the Golf Course. Quirky! To say the least.

"Founded in 1898 and designed by James Braid, this English course reaches new heights in more ways than one. First, it is essential to know that Church Stretton is built around a mountain. Well, a large hill anyway. When James Braid set foot on the land, he obviously knew that locating the clubhouse on the top would create all sorts of problems, including a congested site and lots of uphill walks. So what to do? Braid ingeniously began with three short holes, all par 3s. They elevate the golfer more than 350-feet to the top of the world, at least in terms of the usually calm land of the south of England. No. 1 is 181 yards, No. 2 is 110, and No. 3 is 165. From the vantage point of the fourth tee, one can see just about 360 degrees. And from here one can also see why Braid did this. How better to ascend the hill in a controlled manner? By using par 3s in succession, he managed to take the golfer from point to point, whereas longer holes would have burdened many a golfer by making the experience laborious and tiring. No matter that these are the opening holes. The balance of the course is almost entirely downgrade. How delightful! How quirky."
— Forrest Richardson, Golf Course Architect/ASGCA
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