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Monday 16 June 2014

Ganton Golf Club, Scarborough


Ganton Golf Club, Scarborough
Tuesday 22nd October 2013
Tee time - 1007
Green fee - £75
Score - 90 (par-73)

The clubhouse at Ganton - from the 18th green.
 

Situated a couple of miles outside of the seaside town of Scarborough, Ganton golf club is rated as the best course in Yorkshire.

 

Host of a number of amateur and professional tournaments over the years, most famous of which have been the Ryder Cup (1949), the Curtis Cup (2000) and the Walker Cup (2003). The clubs course guide suggests that if the Open Championship were to move away from the seaside, this would be a favourite. Unfortunately while I would agree it would get a vote of me for the same, in modern terms of length, it is simply not long enough - not that I agree with this!

 

Ganton was opened for play in 1891 and one of its early professionals was the six-time winner of the Open Championship (Harry Vardon). The course itself is a fairly open heathland course with banks of thick gorse around. There are little changes of elevation around but subtle banks, hollows and valleys along with masses of bunkers very cleverly positioned to inflict the maximum damage to your game.

 

Like my round at Woodhall Spa the day previous, the heavens were open for the majority of the round and added was a very strong wind whistling around the course.

 

The entrance off the main road takes you down a drive to the clubhouse which cuts across the 17th and 18th holes. It gives the impression that the designers realised they were running out of space at the last moment and extended the last two holes across the road (probably not the case!).

 

The clubhouse was a pebble dashed single storey building and sat nicely in its surroundings. As I had read previously, this is a club somewhat stuck in the dark ages and visitors are to park behind the clubhouse out of view of the members. I don't particularly like clubs with the likes of 'no phones' and 'jacket and tie' but I must admit I walked away with a completely different opinion.

 

After checking in at the pro shop I went to get changed in the locker rooms. It was like stepping back in time and it was fantastic. All the walls were wood panelled and contained what looked like the original lockers from back in the 20's. These were immaculately kept with all the bumps and dents that come with time. As with the car parks, the visitors and members areas are separated. Hanging on the walls around the changing areas photographs of previous amateur champions and club professionals over the many years, most famous of with was Harry Vardon. The place seemed like it hadn't changes since Harry himself was walking these halls.

 
The visitors changing room - Ganton golf club

I also met up with the caddie master, a lovely chap who explained a bit about the course and offered for me to find my own gap due to the on-going bad weather and the likelihood that the more elderly members wouldn't play in this weather. It did also humour me that he called me Mr Wilson at all times despite me being 15 or so years his junior!!

 

The caddie master held one of the only items of technology in the whole place - a computer - used to check my tee time! I did ask about the opportunity for a caddie, however this is very much a dying luxury as due to the world of electric golf carts, demand for caddies is now so small. It is a shame as I would probably have used one.

 

The members themselves were very stereotypical of what I expected - minimum age of 70 years, immaculately dressed in three piece tweed suits and very well spoken. I like the way that traditional etiquette is still respected at Ganton….that said I still feel a little out of place in such environments.

 

I could not really say much about the practice ground as it was pretty much a wasteland field to knock balls out to. No markers, mats or anything. Unfortunately this is where places like Ganton get a little left behind despite this beauty of a golf course.

 

 

I didn't try the putting green this morning as aside from my poor putting performance in the past couple of days, there was a gap on the tee that I wanted to take advantage of.

 
The 1st green - Ganton golf club

The 1st tee is set off to the right of the clubhouse and I was quite astounded by the perfection of the tee box. Dead flat and square with a firm footing (despite a number of days of rain!) and perfectly cut. The markers were simple and clear to all.

 

Before I go on, while I sprayed it around a bit, the wind was such that it magnified your error and got you into a lot of trouble. Forget about a 1 or 2 club wind, you needed 3-4 over club to reach at times!

 

Straight off the first tee with a bit of a shaky swing, I found my first bunker of the day. As with Woodhall Spa, the bunkers were also cavernous in size and depth and steps were otter the method of getting in and out of them. As I soon figured out, once you find a fairway bunker your hope of making a good score is always left in the bunker with your ball.

 

Throughout the 18 holes I can't recall any fairway bunker that you would be able to take anything other than a sand wedge out of! Brutal…but a great pleasure to play out of.

 

The greens had been scored in two directions as part of the winter schedule and were cut very tight. Unlike Turnberry where I have previously seen this, the greens at Ganton ran very fast and true. Like the tee boxes, all the greens were rock hard and you had to run your approaches up to the green rather otherwise they would be hurrying off the back to find you some trouble!

 



Hole 2 a 415 yard par-4 is a gentle dog leg left downhill where everything hit feeds right. A challenging hole, particularly with a strong wind from left to right to hold it on.

 

Number 3 is a short par-4 with an intimidating tee shot from an enclosed area. Sprawled across the middle of the fairway is a large bunker to collect anything that as such much looks at it. Fortunately a long iron found the fairway (just) and a following 6-iron to an elevated green position took me to 20-feet before knocking it in for a birdie 3.

 
3rd hole from the back tees - Ganton golf club

Number 4 played as the third hardest hole on the course and I can see why. On this day, the wind was strong directly into my face. After drilling a low drive up a slight hill onto the fairway (only managing to get 200 yards), I was left with another 200 yards to the green. The hole kinks around to the right through a little valley at the bottom of which is a little brook, a tree and plenty of gorse where you can wave goodbye to your golf ball! Being a par-4 I decided to have a crack at the green, however there was no easy route. It was all or nothing insofar as I needed to draw the ball low over the trouble to get near. There are few shots that you play in golf when you can honestly say 'that was a perfect shot', this was one of those occasions. I set the ball out 20 yards right of the green and with a low penetrating flight, the ball started drawing back. I knew I needed to land the ball 20 yards short of the green and on the right half of the green. I couldn't have dropped it in a better position. The ball pitched into the bank which took a bit of pace out and it ran onto the green and up to the flag. It was probably 12 feet from the flag. Standing there in the wind and rain on my own I held my arms aloft like an idiot.....then I missed my birdie putt!

 
4th fairway - the site of my 3-wood second into the green......

....to here - 4th green - Ganton golf club


The 5th is a lovely downhill par-3 to a small landing area requiring a full carry with thick gorse and a stream in the run up to the green. With a strong wind behind and in 2 minds coupled with not catching it right narrowly kept me out of real trouble and I was fortunate not to end up in the hazard.

 
A view from the front of the tees - 5th hole - Ganton golf club

In effect Ganton is a links course without the seaside. Especially when the wind comes over the hill at Staxton it can be viscous!

 

Bunkers on this course have been carefully planned and in most instances have a risk reward factor. If you get caught out though, it really hurts your score and is unforgiving. Hole 7 is just one of those. A 434yard dogleg par-4, on the kink of the fairway sits 4 deep bunkers surrounded by thick rough. Playing with the wind, my drive flushed the face of the last bunker and left me with nothing but a wedge out. You need to have had a go at it otherwise you would be playing the hole as a par-5.

 
The perils of taking on (and failing) at Ganton - 7th hole

Number 9 is a very tight 505 yard par-5 with trees and gorse left and right that rewards accuracy rather than power. To walk off with a bogey 6 after stuffing it through the gorse was an achievement.

 


From the twelfth I went off the rails a bit and lost 3 balls in 5 holes which wasn't helped by the wind. That wasn't considering the amount of provisional tee shots I played, but fortunately I found the originals, otherwise I would safely have been into three figures on the scorecard!

 

Holes 16 to 18 is a lovely closing stretch. The tee shot from 16 is dominated by an enormous bunker spread across the fairway at about 180 yards that blocks the rest of the view of the hole. Once you find the fairway, the hole narrows towards the green and it feels very intimate and somewhat protecting of the gusting winds.

 
Hole 16 featuring the massive bunker - Ganton golf club

Hole 17 crosses from one side of the entrance road to the other. Played off the tips, this can be played as either a par-3 or par-4. Off the whites is a 251 yard short par-4. There is a landing area, but it is so small and would leave limited visibility of the green that a smooth swing of the big dog straight at the green is the best advice. After missing right into one of the 3 bunkers in the run up to the green, I was fortunate to walk off with a par 4.

 
View from the front tees - hole 17 - Ganton golf club

The closing hole a Ganton has a blind tee shot played at a marker post. It is possible (as I did) to find the fairway and be completely blocked out from the green by the towering pines as the hole banks to the left. With confidence lacking at this stage to hit it directly at the clubhouse and draw it into the green, I decided that's chip out and approach back over the road into the green was the best way. 2 putts finished me up with my 90.

 

In all, this was a magnificent course and highly deserving of such high rankings. What I love is the fact that this club doesn't brag about it and is happy to get on with it whereas some courses rest on their laurels and go into decline. In truth I didn't have great hopes for Ganton bit it completely won me over.

 

While I was probably the youngest player on the course by about 30 years (something I was concerned about), I shouldn't have worried. Speaking to the caddie master afterwards he said that 90 was a great score in normal conditions let along in the wind and rain. He also said that most members rarely meet their handicap and summer brings a new dimension to the course when it dries out. He said it is incredibly difficult to keep the ball on the fairways and greens.

 
It could have been a lot worse! - Ganton golf club

Would I return to Ganton? The answer is a resounding yes and in a heartbeat. It was great value and the course was in excellent condition and a good challenge to even the best of golfers.

 

Wednesday 11 June 2014

Woodhall Spa Golf Club (Hotchkin)


Woodhall Spa golf club, Lincoln
Monday 21st October 2013
Tee time - 1040
Green Fee - £88
Score - 89 (par-73)

One of the long carries required to reach the fairway at Woodhall spa - par-5 6th


Home of the English Golf Union, I have always had high expectations for Woodhall Spa.


First introduced as a nine hole course in 1890, it wasn't until 1902 when Stafford Vere Hotchkin offered the land for a full 18 hole course which is the site for today's golf course. 

Harry Vardon was employed to design the course and it opened on 30 June 1905. 

The course underwent a number of alterations over the following 40 years to become the course that it is today.

In 1995, the Hotchkin family sold the club and course in order to safeguard its future to the English Golf Union. At this point, additional land was secured to build a second course (The Bracken) and extensive practice facilities. The main course was renamed after its founder 'The Hotchkin'. 

The clubhouse didn't really match the heritage of this wonderful course, but in hindsight it is easy to compare this club with others more prestigious ones on the list. Woodhall Spa is a hidden gem nestled away in the Lincolnshire countryside and it is the beauty of the course that installs this course so high on the list. 

Woodhall Spa does have some of the best academy facilities in the country. The range was large and covered with good quality mats and free range balls. Like Turnberry, there are a number of greens set out on the range with clearly marked and referenced greens. 

The putting green outside the clubhouse reflected the course greens also and had a lot of break on them considering the weather. 

I had clearly booked a bad week to play golf whereby it pretty much rained the entire round and the days leading up to it. The wind was also swirling round the course and created the additional challenge on some holes. 

The course itself was very well matured; everything seemed very well settled and established. The tee boxes were immaculate and the markers clean and concise. 

Playing the Hotchkin from the whites required good length off the tee due to the mandatory carry required to nearly every tee shot. The majority required a 180 years carry just to find the fairway; otherwise you found your ball stuck in the protected heather. 

The bunkers require no introduction. I have never seen bunkers this size on any courses (with the exception of the Himalaya bunker at St. Enodoc). On the second hole I found one of the right hand fairway bunkers which must have been 10 feet deep - not something I am used to! There was absolutely no way that even a tour professional was finding the green from this position. Unfortunately I took two to get out and headed off the green with a double bogey 6. 

The bunkers on this course guard everything, the fairways as well as the greens; they are strategically placed to collect any loose shots.

There are a number of memorable holes on this golf course. The par 4 third hole is the beautiful signature hole featuring an ancient monument overlooking the green. The 'Tower on the moor' is the remains of a stair turret belonging to a hunting lodge which was built in the 15th century. It is suggested that the tower was partially dismantled in the late 15 hundreds when the bricks were used in the repair of Tattershall Castle. 

3rd Hole Woodhall Spa (Hotchkin) - overlooked by the 'Tower on the moor'.

Woodhall Spa has only three par-3's on the course and they are all stunning and some of the best I have played anywhere. Number 5 tee shot is to a very long but narrow green. At under 15 yards wide you need to be very accurate to hit the short stuff.  Initially from the tee it is not too daunting, however on consultation with the course planner you realise the green is flanked front, left and right with cavernous deep bunkers. This is one of the best holes on the course, especially when you knock it to 20 feet and avoid the trouble of those bunkers that are in the region of 10 feet deep!

The par-3 5th hole - Woodhall Spa


Hole 10 is another great hole. A short par-4 requires an accurate tee shot to a twisting fairway with 2 strategically placed bunker to gobble up a stray one. Should you find the fairway then you have a good chance at par into yet another small undulating green. 

The last of the par-3's is number 12 and my favourite. The tee box is one continuous tee box stretch 63 yards from back to front that is tucked tightly into the trees and gives you a sense of claustrophobia (especially when you play with a draw). Leave it short and you are in the thick rough and heather, push it right, left or long slightly and again you will be in the deep traps. This is such a visually striking hole.

My favourite - the par-3 12th hole - Woodhall Spa


Number 15 plays as a short par-4 but one of the hardest on the course. Playing off the whites I wasn't long enough to be able to reach off the tee so a 3 wood to find position leaves probably the most difficult approach on the whole course. The green is sunk down so that the bunkers cover it up from clear view. In addition to this, the bunkers start 40 yards from the front of the green that muddles your distance perception so ignore the yardages at your peril. 

The difficult approach to the short par-4 15th - Woodhall Spa


The course doesn't go easy on you at any point. Hole 16 requires a 205+ yard drive just to find the front of the fairway which then narrows to under 20 yards wide in your landing zone so this is definitely a course for the seasoned golfer and one that I loved the challenge of playing. 

A point of view from one of Woodhall Spa's many deep bunkers!


Number 18 is a great finisher. A par-5 slight dog leg right doesn't suit a right-to-left player such as myself and forced me to think carefully and not push my luck. Your second needs careful placement to avoid the 2 bunkers popping up in the middle of the fairway (a bit like 'Spectacles' on number 17 at Carnoustie).

The 18th green at Woodhall Spa with the clubhouse in the background


The course on the day I played was very quiet and I can't tell you how much pleasure I had in walking it in the peace of my own thoughts with my clubs on my back. My thoughts of how I played at the time was very mediocre, but on further reflection after shooting 89 in heavy rain on a course this ruthless I felt more like I had shot a 75! I hit some great shots by my own account and because I drove the ball well it generally kept me out of trouble. 

Overall this is a truly great course and I wish I lived closer to this place to be able to play it more often. It was great value for money considering the position it holds on not only the GB&I list but the world list. 

My advice is to plan a journey over there any play the course, anytime of year is fantastic.