Wine Valley was one of the final golf courses I played on my 23 day trip that included almost 40 rounds of golf. Wine Valley is certainly in my top 5 and would rank somewhere between a 7.5 and an 8.5 on the Doak scale. This course must be seen, even if it requires a fair bit of travel (4 hours driving on my part).
To see my other photo tours completed thus far from this trip:
Sanctuary, CO:
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,48714.0.htmlPrairie Club (Dunes), NE:
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,48734.0.htmlAwarii Dunes, NE:
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,48784.0.htmlWild Horse, NE:
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,48807.0.htmlGolf Club at Bear Dance, CO:
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,48903.0.htmlCoeur D'Alene Resort, ID:
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,48906.0.htmlWhat I liked:
1) Greens - Interesting shaping and contouring. None are too flat and none too extreme.
2) Half-shot penalties. Lost balls will be rare at WV. If you want to make birdies you must challenge the hazards. But, being out of place off the tee still has the possibility of making par. The greens have several large run-offs. Missing the green will mean a difficult but interesting up-and-down opportunity where a great shot can save a par, but one should not make worse than bogey. I can see many bogey golfers having some of their best rounds at WV, but scratch golfers not even coming close to par.
3) Undulations in chipping areas - No doubt shots from a chipping area confound many golfers. But most eventually learn that putter is the play. BUT, there are humps and bumps in the run-offs that make these somewhat simple putts much more interesting.
4) Sideboards and flattened side boards - There are plenty of sideboards and backboards at WV that give the creative golfer more than option for a given shot. One thing I really liked was that the sideboards got very flat just off the green. This means you can't just aim somewhere between the pin and the sideboard and be sure of the kick down to the hole. Furthermore, shots aimed at the pin and hit slightly off-line will not garner the advantage of the sideboard. The player must choose - aim at the hole or aim at the sideboard.
5) Conditioning - really F&F. Pretty much perfect, in my opinion. Fairways were running, balls were bouncing, greens were fast but manageable.
6) Routing is constantly changing directions (nowhere more obviously than holes 1-2), meaning strong winds are kept in check
Things I didn't like:
1) The ponds on the three holes on the front nine felt contrived, out of place and of little interest.
2) The split fairway par-5 made little sense to me.
On to the tour...