Archive for Ontario Golf Course Ratings

Remington-Parkview…the Upper Course

We may have menitoned this course before somewhere on this blogsite. I count it as our home course, (closer to my home) even though Tim counts Seaton (closer to his). I grew up playing Parkview way back in the day, and now that Remington Homes have purchased it, it has only gotten better. They have really kept this course in great shape this year, bought 200 new carts, and cleaned things up. Apart from all the goose-shit on certain holes, and the hydro wires (you get a free shot if you clang one off them) this is a nice walk or ride on a Sunday morning.

The back tees play around 6400 but I think that is generous. Don’t be put off by playing from the back tees here, the whites aren’t always that far in front so don’t make too much of a difference in length.

The course map for this pleasant track can be found here, but I will give you my thoughts on getting around without too much strain as well. Read the rest of this entry »

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Just a neat thing to have around…

So, in poking around, I came across this cool website that lets you see the course maps of tons of courses. Great for seeing what you will be playing if you have never played it before.

Click here –> CLICK <– ereh kcilC

keep it in the short grass

b-b

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Course notes for the Meadow Nest 18 at Hawk Ridge GC

 As has been mentioned on this site recently, Tim, and now I, have played up at Hawk Ridge GC in Orillia. Have to say, really big fan thus far. In keeping with what might very well become a tradition here on G.O.L.F. I will give you my thoughts on how to get around this fairly long track with the minimal amount of bloodshed and balls lost. So, without further chatter from me, here we go… (keep in mind, we played from basically the back tees, so let that be in your head if you play from the whites)

Number one is a pretty fair opening hole. For the bombers out there, you can get to the other side of the creek (about 3 and change) and have an easy run up to this large tiered green. For the rest of us, play your shot to the 200 or 150 marker, staying to the middle, middle-right of the fairway.Keeping the little creek that is about 50 yards in front of the green in mind, hit a nice high and soft shot into the pin. I advise you to keep below the hole though.

Number two is another decent Par 4 that doesn’t offer too much in the way of trouble. You really do want to be on the left center of the fairway though, as the approach shot needs to be bang on to this tightly guarded green that has a little creek in front, and trees on either side. Read the rest of this entry »

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PureFit Rises To The Challenge; Hawk Ridge G&CC Review

I played my first round with my new set of PureFit clubs today, and while I had the worst round I’ve had in two years, I loved the clubs. There’s a lot of feedback off them, as Kevin’s pointed out, and the ball really springs off the club. I had some fantastic shots off them, and it’s just that my entire stance has changed now that I’ve got clubs that have been fitted to my height [I'm 6'5"].

So the TriCavity is a thing of beauty for me, and after playing this round with them I’d reccomend them to any high-handicapped duffer like me that wants a set of clubs that’s going to improve his game without raping his wallet. My score today doesn’t reflect my potential with them – now that my clubs are fitted for me, I’ve got to redesign my whole stance, and I’m aware that I have to go through hell before I get to heaven now – but for a third of the price of a set of Nike Slingshots or half the price of a set of NDS, you’re going to get some quality sticks, my friend.

I’ll do a “What’s In The Bag?” update soon for my clubs, but I want to touch on Hawk Ridge for now, and give you a rating on one of their courses.

***

HAWK RIDGE GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB

1151 Hurlwood Lane, Orillia, ON L3V 6K8
Phone: (705) 327-1610
Fax: (705) 329-2205
Email: hrgweb@hawkridgegolf.com
http://www.hawkridgegolf.com
CATEGORY / RATING [out of 5]
Beauty – 4
Strategy – 4
Challenge – 4
Design – 4.5
Par 3 Holes – 4
Par 4 Holes – 4
Par 5 Holes – 4
Conditioning – 5
Fun – 5
Course Service – 4
Pace of Play – 5
Value for Money- 5
Food Quality – N/A
Walkability – Excellent
Over All Rating – 4.5

For Scoregolf‘s Course Rating, click HERE

NOTES: Hawk Ridge’s Meadow Nest course is absolutely beautiful, and easily walkable [it's relatively flat, and I walked it today with a 70+ man who had no trouble at all]. The pace of play is kept up by marshals who remain present all day long, so that’s really nice to see, and you’ll see the cart girl at least two or three times on your round. There’s bathrooms and water fountains along the way, too, and the place is incredibly well maintained and manicured. It’s hard not to be impressed with Hawk Ridge, and if you’re in the Orillia area, this semi-private place is worth your time.

It’s worth your money, too, because there’s a really reasonable $52 green fee. If Hawk Ridge was in Toronto, you’d be paying $75 for the round. There really isn’t a downside to this course; you’ll get bunched up at the Par 3′s, but that happens everywhere. But is it worth the drive to Orillia? Well, if you like driving, then definitely go. If you’ don’t, wait until you happen to be up there and pop in. But either way, don’t miss it.

- BC

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Seaton Golf Course Review; World Golf Predictions Part II [BC's Gettin' A Muffin!]

Here’s the current leaderboard after Round Two at the American Express Championship. If it were anyone else, I wouldn’t think too much of it, but it’s Tiger and I’ve got to think I’m winning a muffin. Of course, it’s only fair to point out that picking Tiger to win a tournament is like picking Lance Armstrong to win the Tour. It’s not like I’m going out on a limb here. Any Moving Day Predictions, anyone? Feel free to comment.

Anyhow, as Tiger looks to deny Furyk AGAIN on Sunday, I figure I could fill in some time with another Ontario golf course review.

***

SEATON GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB

2665 Brock Road
Pickering, ON L1V 2P8
Clubhouse: 905-683-3822

CATEGORY / RATING [out of 5]
Beauty – 3.5
Strategy – 3
Challenge – 3.5
Design – 3
Par 3 Holes – 3
Par 4 Holes – 4
Par 5 Holes – 3.5
Conditioning – 4
Fun – 4
Course Service – 3
Pace of Play – 3.5
Value for Money- 4.5
Food Quality – 3
Walkability – Good
Over All Rating – 4

For Scoregolf‘s Course Rating, click HERE

NOTES: I’d better come clean by saying that I consider Seaton to be our foursome’s home course, and therefore I’m obviously a biased fan of it. Amir doesn’t like it all that much, but the rest of us do: for $55 on a Sunday morning with cart, it can’t be beat, baby.

There’s some challenging little holes [Croucher has great local knowledge here he'll share with you, but the 7th is the toughest, and the 6th through 10th can really test you], and in general Seaton’s a great bang for your buck. If you’re like me and unable or unwilling to play $100+ golf courses around Ontario, you’re probably going to enjoy Seaton as much as I do. There’s no really stupidly-designed holes, the pin placement is almost always fair to us duffers, and the food at the clubhouse is edible. It’s a 6018 yard, par 70 course, so it’s walkable, and it’s not overly hilly, so you won’t feel like you need a mountain goat to carry your bags like you might at Dentonia. Here’s a course outline:

The bottom line at this place is that if you’re a weekend golfer looking to have some fun and be challenged a little bit without feeling beat up on by the course, Seaton’s worth the drive from anywhere in the GTA.

If you’re going, tell Mark that Kevin Croucher and his gang sent you. It probably won’t do you any good, but it might get us something!

CROUCHER’S LOCAL KNOWLEDGE: SEATON G&CC

[Kevin originally posted his words of advice as a comment, but it deserves it's own section.]

Stay to the left-centre of #3 and you will be rewarded with an easy chip to a longer than wide green.

IF you have the cojones for it, stay down the roadside of the fairway on #4. This will leave you with a nice approach into a very undulating green. If you do go up the right, be smart, chip back to the front edge of the green area, get up and down, and walk away with a 4.

Don’t be a hero on #5. Hit it to the 150 marker and stay to the left of this green. It runs away towards the east, and it is protected by a steep faced bunker.

Right is might on #6 if you have to bail anywhere, and oh yeah, stay below the hole. You may as well, because if you don’t and you hit your putt too hard, you will be there anyhow. Save a stroke, play smart.

On #7 you have three choices. Be scared by the trees in front and to the right. Let the trees on the left, and the hydro wires make your tummy turn, or you can block them all out, hit a club that will get you to the other side of the hill, shading to the left a bit, (not too far though as you will see when you get up there) and hit an easy second shot into a fair green and walk away with a par. Really easy to type, not so easy to do.

#8 is a nice, all carry Par 3 with a protecting bunker, and a hidden from the tee, very long, flat, fast green. Tight tee shot with trees on both sides, so hit a club that you can either carry 200 yards (from the blues) or bail to the landing area on the hill side. Either way, if you get a 4 on this hole, high fives all ’round, and walk quickly to #9.

#9 is about 310 yards fom the back tees, and if you stop and think about it, you can get a four on this hole without too much trouble. It looks hard, seems hard, but if you hit whatever club can get you to the 150 marker, hit another one that can get you 150 yards on an uphill track, then the only thing you will really have to worry about is the green which is quick front to back. So you get a 5. Take it and get to the clubhouse for a snackie-poo and you have made your turn.

# 10 is fairly straight forward. A 400 yards or so Par 4 that you should play on the right-center of the fairway. Longish green with a little slope at the front. Should be a nice 4/5.

I like #11, especially standing on the green during the fall and looking back up the hill. Gorgeous colours and a nice view. This is a downhill Par 4 that you can let it all out on. Play down what seems the right, but is really the centre of the fairway. Although, you can play down the left and your approach shot isnt that hard either. Big green that has a few big slopes on it. If you come in from the left you can land on the hilly side of the green and run the ball down to somewhere near the pin.

I HATE 12!!! Therefore, I say never speak of it again.

13 is a good Par 5 that you need to have your brain-cells meshing on. Out of bounds all the way down the right, and a pinched in fairway near the 150 marker with a freaking stupid big tree right in the middle up by the 100 yard pin. And if that isn’t enough, a bloody pond is to the left of the green that is deceptive. Hit your tee shot to the leftish center of the fairway. If you can hit a 3-wood or 5 wood long, then go at the green. If not, then be smart, hit it somewhere up near the 150-125 yard mark, and hit a high wedge into the green. You do that, and you can walk away with a par. Don’t do it, and you walk away with a double.

On 14 go at the 150 marker off the tee. Really. Downhill from there with a big green that is fast and runs away to the back.

# 15 is an all carry Par 3 that you will love in the Spring/Fall and hate in the Summer. This green slopes dramtically to the front so hit it high, land it soft and walk away quickly if you get anything less than a 5.

We are now in the home stretch. The tee shot on 16 needs to be more left than right, as the hole is a 90 degree dogleg right that will punish you for being a Republican. Just for this hole be a centrist, or even, dare I say it, a small L, liberal. The green, when you get there runs faster than Ben Johnson from left to right, so be smart. Play to the swale in front, and putt it in.

# 17 you can almost drive if you can hit it 300 or so. If not, stay in the middle, land your approach in front (not when it is wet though,) and keep in mind this is a small green that is very quick. Flat, but quick.

Let it all hang out on 18. You can get home from really anywhere in the fairway. (I said ‘fairway’ Tim). Big flat green, with only a few little bumps.

- Kevin

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4 Seasons GC: We Stopped Keeping Score

BC’s COURSE RATING: 4 SEASONS COUNTRY CLUB

RR#5 Con.8 #1900
Claremont ON , L1Y 1A2
Phone: (877) 406-8583
Website: http://www.2golf.ca/location/index.php

CATEGORY / RATING [out of 5]
Beauty – 4
Strategy – 3
Challenge – 3.5
Design – 2
Par 3 Holes – 2
Par 4 Holes – 3
Par 5 Holes – 3
Conditioning – 2.5
Fun – 1
Course Service – 0
Pace of Play – 3
Value for Money- 1
Food Quality – N/A
Walkability – Demanding
Over All Rating – 2

For Scoregolf‘s Course Rating, click HERE

NOTES: So Dennis, Amir and I hit 4 Seasons Country Club in Claremont today, and were left vastly disappointed with the course. This wasn’t a V-Cup event, as Kevin had to work; although there’s no hard and fast rule about it, I don’t like the idea of the guy holding the Cup not getting a chance to defend it because the office called and he had to answer. Instead, this round was just about having some fun. Or it would have been, if it had been anywhere but 4 Seasons.

We came across this place last week, after we’d played 18 at Seaton Golf & Country Club and were looking for a place to fit us in for another 18 [Seaton being full on the long weekend]. It was full as well, but as we had driven into the place we saw some challenging-looking holes, great landscaping and a beautiful clubhouse. It impressed us enough to book a tee-time for this week. This course lied to us, as Amir said, and we won’t be returning there.

While the course has it’s challenges, it’s also and extremely dumb course in terms of design. The back nine aren’t just hilly – they go straight up and straight down. Amir had a cart and Dennis walked half the time and rode half the time, but I walked the whole thing.. and let me tell you, this short little beast felt a lot longer than it was. 4 Seasons has a course rating of 66.5 and a slope rating of 124 [from the tips], but the pin positions were apparently decided by an idiot who thought putting a hole on a slope was a good idea. Also, the further away from the roads one got, the poorer the conditions were: near the back, you couldn’t tell the fairways from the rough. Most notably, however, this is the only course we’ve ever played where we just stopped keeping score.

That ought to tell you something.

*****

Pure Fit
On another note, my short clubs are killing me. I’m looking forward to a new set Kevin is getting his buddy at Pure Fit to build for me – they’re a new company ’round here, and we’re looking forward to trying out some of their stuff – and I don’t think I’ll be playing much until they’re in. Clearly my game needs a lot of work, but I see no point working and spending money on it when the current tools I have are far from sufficient. I loathe the idea of not playing golf on the weekend with the boys, but I am dying here.

Parting shot: Jim Furyk won the Bell Canadian Open today. I’m pretty happy about that, as he’s one of my favourites. Going to be fun seeing him and Tiger at the Ryder.

- BC

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