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2009 Golf Course Home
Golf Holes
2010 GolfCourseHome Dream 18 Golf Holes
Blackstone, AZ is #1.
If you were to play 18 of the finest, most memorable golf holes to be found within any golf course community, which holes would they be? That's the hypothetical question we posed in creating our 2009 listing of great holes from among the communities featured on GolfCourseHome.net. The golf in gated communities is among the purest, best-designed and most carefully crafted in the entire American portfolio. These havens of the country club lifestyle represent more than 5,000 golf holes, 300-plus courses and over 75 different golf architects—a cornucopia to choose from. Many of the courses are highly ranked by the leading golf publications and have been crafted by the great names in golf course design. That's only part of the story, however. Live on a Dream The 18 entries below each include a parenthetical denoting which hole number hole on the original course our selected hole represents. For detailed information on any of these courses or communities, just click on the highlighted name of the community. Here is a quick list of the holes, in our Dream 18 sequence. Below the initial list you will find in-depth descriptions. No. 1. Blackstone (1st), Peoria AZ No. 2. Deer Brook Golf Club (9th), Shelby NC No. 3. Lake Jovita Golf & Country Club (11th), Dade City FL No. 4. The Georgia Club, (5th, original 18), Statham GA No. 5. The Cliffs at Keowee Springs (7th), Six Mile SC No. 6. Lake Ridge (16th), Cedar Hill TX No. 7. Madison Lakes (4th), Madison GA No. 8. Briar’s Creek (8th), John’s Island SC No. 9. Lockwood Folly Country Club (18th), Holden Beach NC No. 10. Stonehouse (6th), Toana VA No. 11. Golden Ocala Golf & Equestrian Club (4th), Ocala FL No. 12. Belfair (6th West), Bluffton SC No. 13. The Links at Gettysburg (3rd), Mt. Joy Township PA No. 14. Running Y Ranch (4th), Klamath Falls OR No. 15. The Founders Club (5th), Sarasota FL No. 16. Heritage Todd Creek (17th), Thornton CO No. 17. Forest Dunes (14th), Roscommon MI No. 18. Wachesaw Plantation (18th), Murrels Inlet SC No. 1. Blackstone (1st), Peoria AZ Designed as a sophisticated enclave within the greater gated community of Vistancia, Blackstone tapped the uncommon design skills of Jim Engh to craft an aesthetically robust golf course that would play with great variety from one day to the next. Members rave about Engh’s rumpled, surprise-filled layout as much as they praise Blackstone’s true country-club experience and the desert, mountain and golf course vistas from their custom and luxury homes within the community’s 588 acres of Sonoran terrain. We start this Dream 18 with the opening hole Engh uses as an emerald-green welcome mat for his Blackstone golfers. It’s certainly inviting, with a fairway nearly 70 yards wide and loaded with those famed contours. A nice drive will be rewarded with a short approach to a gently undulating green bisected by a small ridge. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 2. Deer Brook Golf Club (9th), Shelby NC The stimulating front nine at Deer Brook closes with a handsome par-4 that can stretch to 415 yards but plays from a member-tee yardage of 378. A well-placed placed drive is crucial as the fairway slopes leftward, favoring a fade. Water lurks on the left as golfers hit to the green, which is guarded by twin traps left and right. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 3. Lake Jovita Golf & Country Club (11th), Dade City FL Tom Lehman, the PGA Tour pro who designed Lake Jovita South (and the North , as well), built greens with subtle, even confounding, contours. That 11th is a par-5 playing 539 yards from the blues. It hides its green behind a plateau fairway that drops suddenly to the target—backed by water and guarded left and short-right by bunkers. A tough and memorable hole. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 4. The Georgia Club, (5th, original 18), Statham GA The original fifth hole of his Chancellors Course is a strategically compelling par-4 where any pushed or sliced tee shot flirts with water right. What really occupies the player’s thoughts on the tee is a specimen oak left in place on the fairway, down the right side about 80 yards from the front of the green. To play around this obstacle could require an imaginative shot, low and curving. Up at the green, a framing pair of sand bunkers are placed so as to add even more value to the left-side tee shot. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 5. The Cliffs at Keowee Springs (7th), Six Mile SC You’ll know it’s working if you can negotiate the dogleg on the par-4 seventh at the Tom Fazio-designed Keowee Springs Course. Ample fairway to the left of the turn bunker offers an easy target but leaves you a lengthy route to the green. To make this hole play shorter, pound your drive over that bunker and catch the downslope on the other side of it. Players should note that the approach shot over a small valley to an elevated green is better if played from the left side of the fairway. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 6. Lake Ridge (16th), Cedar Hill TX Listed in the “Best of Texas” by Texas Golfer magazine, the Jeff Brauer-designed Tangle Ridge features 6,835 yards of exciting elevation changes, subtle greens and tree-lined fairways. Brauer’s 424-yard 16th is a par-4 with a deceptively simple appearance. Its main feature is a “Valley of Sin” in the approach area. Don't let your second shot fall into it, since a chip or putt over the this type of contour is an unusual and seldom-practiced shot. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 7. Madison Lakes (4th), Madison GA Already praised by the national golf media, the course will be complemented by a proposed executive-style layout for beginners and casual golfers. The first par-3 in our Dream 18 for 2009 is Long Shadow G.C.’s fourth hole, which can play at yardages from 115 all the way up to 239. Whatever distance you play, the strategy is to fly your tee shot into the left-front portion of green. contours will feed ball toward center. A hint: Elevation change is less than it appears, from tee to green. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 8. Briar’s Creek (8th), John’s Island SC The golf is world-class golf with zero tee times, and the hole we place in our Dream 18 is Briar’s Creek No. 8. The tee shot on this 404-yard par-4 will need your full attention. A bunker guards the left side; another lures any overdone bailout shot on the right. The green and approach are divided by a ridge into left and right halves. This is a great example of greenside bunkers that aren't overly large in size but exert a powerful effect on play because subtle ground contours will feed an iffy shot perilously toward the hazard. Back to Top Back to Quick List No. 9. Lockwood Folly Country Club (18th), Holden Beach NC The pond to the right of the 18th green on Willard Byrd's 500-yard, par-4 finishing hole is a great example of water hazards deployed to please the eye and jangle the nerves at the same time. Already any golfer is thinking "water" as they proceed up this short (for a par-5) but serpentine fairway. That's because the hole’s backdrop is a long, luxuriant view of the Intracoastal Waterway, flecked with islands and stretching to the Atlantic. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 10. Stonehouse (6th), Toana VA An admired Mike Strantz course at Stonehouse draws in-the-know golfers from throughout the region. Named Best New Upscale Public Course in the U.S. by Golf Digest in 1996, it is known for dramatic elevation changes over rolling hills and for having some of the biggest greens in the state. We’ve picked Stonehouse’s toughest hole to include in our collection. It’s No. 6, a par-4 that plays 435 from the gold tees, 391 from the whites. This is a dogleg-right that demands a well-placed drive so the player will have as short an iron as possible into a narrow green that’s tough to hold. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 11. Golden Ocala Golf & Equestrian Club (4th), Ocala FL No. 4 at Golden Ocala is a “tribute” hole by architect Ron Garl that transports Golden Ocala golfers to southwest Scotland via its wondrous resemblance to the so-called Postage Stamp par-3 at Royal Troon. Stand on the tee with your wedge or 9-iron and study the little hillock mounds with their thick grassy fur, alongside sharp, sculpted bunkers with flat sandy surfaces to play from. All it takes is a high, delicate pitch to find the putting surface—with Florida breezes that replicate Scottish winds rushing past you to complicate matters. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 12. Belfair (6th West), Bluffton SC On Belfair West, No. 6 is a short, well-nuanced par-4 that plays 367 from the back tee, with 359 or 341 as shorter yardage options. This is a truly unique golf hole, with two greens. Players have to be mindful of which green is in use on that day before they hit their drives, as placement and approach angle are highly influenced by the green's location. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 13. The Links at Gettysburg (3rd), Mt. Joy Township PA Your round at The Links At Gettysburg will take you up and down rolling Pennsylvania hills, with lakes and creeks on almost every hole and dramatic red rock cliffs that form the backdrop for memorable golf. One of those is the 3rd, the signature hole, a dramatic par-3 from an elevated tee to a large undulating green that fronts a red rock cliff. Hit too far and you'll find the large trap in front of the cliff. Leave it short and you'll hit the creek in front of the green. This 187-yard hole is a true test of skill. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 14. Running Y Ranch (4th), Klamath Falls OR Palmer himself considers the track one of his best. From its fine array of holes, we select No. 4, which can be played from 409 all the way down to 325 for juniors. Golfers should note the bunkers at the end of the fairway, which will scold an overly long drive, even a straight one. And beware of water down the right side, as well. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 15. The Founders Club (5th), Sarasota FL For the Dream 18, we showcase this course’s fifth hole, a medium-length par-4 that offers the opportunity to play driver for maximum distance off the tee. Longer hitters may be as bold to play for the upper level fairway off the tee, which affords the optimum approach position. Back to Top Back to Quick List
No. 16. Heritage Todd Creek (17th), Thornton CO For the Dream 18, we spotlight the par-3, water-guarded 17th here at Heritage Todd Creek. Now a staple of American golf, the do-or-die 17th hole with water ringing the green is well represented at Heritage Todd Creek. This one-shotter is abetted by a fairly deep and steep-faced sand bunker just short of the green. Up above the hole are mounds you can hit bailout shots into, but then comes the chip back, with water staring you in the face.
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