Yesterday I played a fun and quirky course about 30 minutes north of Spokane called Antler Springs. The venue is located on private land by a doctor who always had a dream of building a course and sits on a hilly piece of property. I had a chat with his cousin who was manning the “pro shop” as he was out on vacation. According to him he opened the 1st 9 in 2001 as a sort of trial run to see if he could actually do it and if it would be viable as a going concern. After having good success with the locals, he added an additional 9 in 2005 to become the 18 hole course it is today.
The neat thing about the course is he moved very little dirt as he was pretty much a one man crew and didn’t have the resources to do otherwise. What resulted was a very quirky course with a few crazy, but fun holes. Where he ended up spending the most money was building a water feature, a moat of sorts… that has 2 greens and 2 tee boxes playing to and from it. This will be detailed in the course review.
I’ve played a few of these mom and pa jobs and usually they are just too goofy or in such poor condition, its barely recognizable as golf. But in this case, I thought this course worked very well because while there was plenty of quirk, the conditions were good: fast and firm fairways with good greens that stimped at about 7 and putted pure.
While the card says it plays to a par 72, that’s only more of a general guideline!
Many of the par 4s were very short and there wasn’t a true par 5 on the course. But the smallness of the greens and the surrounding hazards keeps players honest. To boot, 3 of the 4 par 3s were actually fairly difficult with demanding shot requirements to tiny greens. The course also has several blind tee shots that adds mystery/intrigue!! It even includes one terrific hole that I would put up against anything I’ve played in Spokane, (CDA area excluded). It’s a triple dogleg par 4 that winds its way up a hill and plays to about 410 yards.
Overall there was plenty of quirk and charm to be found on the course so I’m dubbing it the Painswick of the Pacific NorthWest. And given its location in a fairly rural setting, with only a few groups on the course at any given time, it very much has that country feel and is like playing your own private golf course!!
The requisite turn off sign. The review wouldn't be complete with it!!
When you drive thru the gate, this is the 1st thing you see, the life size version of thier logo. Apparently the good doctor has lots of hobbies, up to an including learning how to weld aluminum. Very cool!!
Then you turn the corner and you view the stately "locker rooms" on the left and "pro shop" on the right.
You also get a close up view of the course mascot...Larry the llama!
And just behind the club house, they have the members lounge area. A perfect place to relax after a round and settle ur bets!