On Mother's Day Weekend, we brought my 79 year old mother in law down, and playing golf was on the schedule. Given her age, we picked a 9 hole, par 3 course, where a 1970's era apt. complex had decided to offer golf as an amenity, also conveniently making use of the floodplain that went through their complex. 834 yards of front tee golf, nine holes, seemed the perfect venue.
Now, despite having lived within 10 miles of this place, and even passing on the chance to watch my then high school son compete there once, I had never been on the property, much less played it. There were a lot of surprises -
First, it was well treed and very beautiful, much nicer than you would expect for a $13 golf course. But, there were some negative surprises to us as well.
- Every hole had some form of water, with 4-5 forced carries, the rest lateral (all but two on the left side, at least).
- The first six greens were highly elevated, probably to keep them out of the floodplain, but tees had no such protection. Nearly every hole played uphill.
- Even if fairly level, 6 of 9 greens had 30% slopes up to them, from at least 3 sides. My mother-in-law quit many holes to avoid the climb.
- To fit the tight property, most greens sloped 30% to the water, so many near misses ended up deep sixed.
We won't go back. It seems that the design of the course spectacularly failed to meet its objective of a low cost, beginner and casual player, walking course. Specifically, why build a walker's course and put mountain climbing on every hole? And, use water and steep slopes so frequently for a course aimed at casual players?
Oddly, even though there were no carts allowed, the course did have a fairly new (or largely unused) cart path system wall to wall. Other than for the superintendent's access, I wondered why they built that.
I recalled a 1970's Joe Finger article railing against a par 3 course he saw in a seniors complex somewhere, as it featured several over 200 yard par 3 holes. I am sure many CCFAD courses built in the 1980-90s could be called too difficult at public courses. Perhaps some courses making concessions to playability when built on environmentally sensitive sites.
Are there any specific courses you have played that you thought were ill suited to their purpose or the players they served?